Interpol posts wanted notice for WikiLeaks founder

LONDON, (Reuters) – Interpol issued a “red notice” yesterday to assist in the arrest of Julian Assange, founder of  the whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks, who is wanted in Sweden  on suspicion of sexual crimes.

Assange, a former computer hacker now at the centre of a  global controversy after WikiLeaks released a trove of  classified U.S. diplomatic cables at the weekend, denies the  Swedish allegations.

The website of Interpol, the international police agency,  said anyone with information on the Australian-born Assange, 39,  should contact their national or local police.

Red notices allow arrest warrants issued by national police  authorities to be circulated to other countries to facilitate  arrests and help possible extradition.

Assange’s current whereabouts are not known and he is  believed to move from country to country.
A Swedish court on Nov. 18 ordered the detention of Assange.  The prosecutor’s office had started an investigation into  allegations of rape, sexual molestation and unlawful coercion  against Assange in September.

Assange’s lawyer, Bjorn Hurtig, told journalists after the  hearings he expected a European arrest warrant would be issued  for Assange, who had sometimes visited Sweden in the past, and  that he would probably appeal.

Assange has called the allegations baseless and criticised  what he has called a legal circus in Sweden, where he had been  seeking to build a base in order to benefit from its strict  journalist protection laws.

WikiLeaks has angered the United States by releasing more  than 250,000 State Department cables exposing the inner workings  of U.S. diplomacy, including brutally candid assessments of  world leaders.

WikiLeaks had in October released nearly 400,000 classified  U.S. files on the Iraq war, which Assange said showed 15,000  more Iraqi civilian deaths had occurred than thought.