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Lawyer: WikiLeaks' Assange to surrender to British police


LONDON — WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is expected to surrender to British police Tuesday as part of a Swedish sex-crimes investigation — one of a host of international legal, financial, and security challenges closing in on the secret-spilling website. Lawyer Mark Stephens has said that Assange, who has been hiding out at an undisclosed location in Britain since WikiLeaks began releasing hundreds of US diplomatic cables to the Web last week, would soon be meeting with officers from London's Scotland Yard. The police force said Tuesday it wouldn't comment until an arrest had been made. The Internet-based organization's room for maneuver is narrowing by the day. It's been battered by web attacks, cut off by Internet service providers and been subjected to a barrage of muscular rhetoric out of the United States. In the latest development, Swiss authorities closed Assange's bank account, depriving him of a key fundraising tool. Mastercard has also pulled the plug on payments to the site, according to technology news website CNET. A European representative for the credit card company didn't immediately return a call seeking comment. The attacks appeared to have been at least partially successful in staunching the flow of secrets — WikiLeaks has not published any new cables to the Internet in more than 24 hours, although stories about the cables have continued to appear in the New York Times and The Guardian, two of the papers given advance access to all 250,000 documents. — AP