Assange's extradition case to hear claims he was bugged by firm linked to Trump backer

Four-week hearing starts at the Old Bailey on Monday

(FILES) In this file photo taken on May 01, 2019 WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange gestures from the window of a prison van as he is driven out of Southwark Crown Court in London, after having been sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for breaching his bail conditions in 2012. Julian Assange has been subjected to drawn-out "psychological torture", a UN rights expert said May 31, 2019, accusing the United States, Britain, Ecuador and Sweden of "collective persecution" of the WikiLeaks founder. The United Nations special rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, Nils Melzer, also warned that if London agrees to an extradition request from Washington, Assange risked the death penalty.
 / AFP / Daniel LEAL-OLIVAS
Powered by automated translation

Julian Assange's extradition hearing is due to begin at London's Old Bailey on Monday.

The four-week hearing is expected to hear claims that the Wikileaks founder was placed under covert surveillance by a company linked to US President Donald Trump’s biggest financial backer.

Assange claims cameras were placed around the Ecuadorean embassy in central London, where he was living as a fugitive, by US security services, The Times  reported.

Assange, 49, is in the high-security Belmarsh prison in south London as he fights an extradition request by the US to stand trial there on espionage charges.

He faces charges under the US Espionage Act for the 2010 release by WikiLeaks of a trove of secret files detailing aspects of US military campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq.

A ruling against Assange could land him in jail for 175 years.

He is accused of working with former US soldier and whistle-blower Chelsea Manning to get classified documents from databases containing about 90,000 Afghanistan war-related activity reports, 400,000 Iraq war-related reports and 250,000 State Department documents.

Assange took refuge in the Ecuadorean embassy in London in 2012 after skipping bail to avoid separate legal proceedings in Sweden, but was dragged out by British police last year.

The allegations of the US spying on him are expected to be at the heart of his case to avoid extradition to the US.

Assange claims he will not receive a fair trial if he is extradited.

He was allegedly placed under surveillance by Undercover Global, a company based in Spain that had been hired by the Ecuadorean government in 2015 to protect him at the embassy.

The Times  reported the company's owner, David Morales, was recruited at a trade fair in Las Vegas.

At the fair he also received a contract from Sheldon Adelson, the chief executive of Las Vegas Sands, a US casino and resort company, which has donated more than $200 million (Dh734.6m) to Mr Trump’s campaigns, to provide protection for his superyacht.

Mr Morales is being investigated in Spain over the alleged London surveillance.