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Julian Assange arrives at the High Court in London for his extradition appeal hearing Lefteris Pitarakis/AP/Press Association Images

Assange extradition hearing begins today

The 40-year-old Wikileaks editor in chief faces extradition to Sweden for questioning about sexual assault and rape allegations.

THE EXTRADITION HEARING of Wikileaks editor-in-chief Julian Assange began today.

He arrived at London’s High Court this morning after it was ruled in February at Belmarsh Magistrate’s Court that he be extradited.

Swedish prosecutors want Assange extradited to Sweden from the United Kingdom so that they can question him about allegations of sexual misconduct in August 2010.

He has not been charged with a crime and denies the rape and sexual assault allegations, which were made by two women.

CNN reports that Judge Howard Riddell dismissed the defence arguments, which were made on procedural and human rights grounds, and said that the allegations are extraditable offences.

The judge also said that the European arrest warrant for Assange was valid and that it was “untrue” to claim that Assange would not be able to get a fair trial in Sweden.

For more information read this story on the CNN news website>

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    Mute Vonvonic
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    Dec 2nd 2021, 7:55 PM

    Tell us our concerns in niche dramatic terms we never heard before… Thanks.

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    Mute Dearbhla O Reilly
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    Dec 2nd 2021, 9:41 PM

    @Vonvonic: I know. Can’t be bothered reading when I see that. I know the rest will just annoy me.

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    Mute Local Ore
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    Dec 3rd 2021, 12:13 AM

    @Vonvonic: Polarity is important as understanding it lets you know where your countries relationships are and should be, multi-polarity means Ireland are likely to be drawn into the middle of multiple centres of power’s arguments. That’s a massive risk, for example right now France and the UK have a major dispute in relation to fishing agreements, Ireland and the UK actually have shared a common opinion on it for the past 40 years but now Ireland is aligned to France in this area through the EU and most joes on the street will say “da Brits are always wrong” but we may have more to gain from the UK winning the argument – either way Ireland will now be pulled hither and thither. Multi-polarity is a massive risk, especially when the Center of power is not aligned to your benefit… is the EU?

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    Mute Madra
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    Dec 2nd 2021, 7:56 PM

    Once Michael’s tender is over, all will be grand.

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    Mute Local Ore
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    Dec 3rd 2021, 12:20 AM

    @Madra: Yes, when he goes polarity will automatically be solved, nurses will grow on trees, as will lorry drivers and builders, economic scarring won’t cause a recession because the global market will understand that Michael Martin was in fact the real reason for the pandemic and magically Ireland will grow a reasonable political party that our biggest economic partners can work with out of the countries ar5e. Or the next leaders will all be the same because the same people are voting… Lowry will still top Tipp, The eejits will still top Kerry, people will still drive parish pump, populism will continue to grow and Ireland will have a load of parties with around 15/20% of the vote that can’t agree for the next 2 decades and nothing will change while they all point fingers at each other.

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    Mute Gary C
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    Dec 2nd 2021, 7:55 PM

    YAAAAAWWWNNNN, More selling fear lol

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    Mute Dave Kavanagh
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    Dec 2nd 2021, 9:06 PM

    The largest risk to Ireland is the incompetence of our current leaders closely followed by the naked popularism of those poised to replace them. If ever a country was screaming out for change, it is modern Ireland, but where will change come from.

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