Assange can’t understand English translation, judge looks for someone fluent in ‘Australian’

Oct 26, 2018

By Matt Novak

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is suing Ecuador, the country that has been protecting him ever since he jumped bail in London on sexual misconduct charges in 2012. Assange claims that Ecuador is violating his rights of asylum by limiting his internet access in the London embassy and requiring that he take care of his cat, but the suit is already off to a bumpy start. According to local media in Australia, Assange can’t understand his English language translator and needs someone fluent in “Australian.”

Should we throw more shrimps on the barbie?

The Sydney Morning Herald reports that Assange is present for the court proceedings via Skype as he sits in Ecuador’s embassy in London. And Assange, who’s originally from Australia, has reportedly called Ecuador’s translation services from Spanish to English, provided by a British translator, “not good enough.”

The judge in Ecuador who’s overseeing the case determined that Assange should be appointed a translator who understands “Australian.”

Judge Karina Martinez said that it was indispensable that Assange testify, and said the court had erred by appointing a translator who only spoke the British version of English, apparently under the impression that Australian dialect is unintelligible to other anglophones.

It’s not immediately clear how long this could delay the case.

Assange is free to leave the embassy in London anytime he likes, but will most likely be arrested by British authorities for skipping on bail. Ecuador has explored a number of different ways to get Assange out of the embassy, including by making him a diplomat to Russia, but nothing has worked. Ecuador cut off Assange’s internet access back in March because it said that the white-haired shit-stirrer was meddling in international affairs. Ecuador’s president, Lenin Moreno, has also called Assange’s presence at the embassy “more than a nuisance.”

The WikiLeaks Twitter account, now run by other people who aren’t named Assange, has been uncharacteristically quiet today and hasn’t mentioned this latest speed bump. WikiLeaks did not immediately respond to Gizmodo’s request for comment.

Australian-English, much like American-English, has developed plenty of its own nuances that set it apart from the Queen’s English over the past few centuries. But it’s unclear what exactly might be causing Assange and the translator so much difficulty.

Stay tuned, mate.
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Credit: Gizmodo, https://gizmodo.com

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