From here.WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been arrested in London on foot of a European arrest warrant for him to face charges in Stockholm.
His lawyer said her client will fight extradition to Sweden.
A Metropolitan Police spokesman said Mr Assange was arrested by officers from the force's Extradition Unit and is due to appear at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court later today.
The Australian whistleblower's London-based lawyer Jennifer Robinson said he would likely resist being returned to Sweden for fear he could be turned over to the United States.
'(The Swedish prosecutor) said publicly on television last night that all she wants is his side of the story. Now we've offered that on numerous occasions. There is no need for him to return to Sweden to do that,' she said.
'I think he will get a fair hearing here in Britain but I think our, his, prospects if he were ever to be returned to the US, which is a real threat, of a fair trial, is, in my view, nigh on impossible,' she said.
Mr Assange's WikiLeaks website has published hundreds of confidential US diplomatic cables in recent weeks.
As governments around the world criticised WikiLeaks, Swedish authorities said they wanted to question him on suspicion of crimes, including sexual assault.
But Ms Robinson refused to discuss further details of Mr Assange's looming meeting with British police, saying only that it was 'bizarre' that his legal team had not yet seen a copy of the arrest warrant and had seen no evidence.
The lawyer said her client was being 'isolated and persecuted' and that death threats had been made on blogs against his son.
'This is obviously part of a broader risk of a threat to Mr Assange himself,' she said in an ABC interview from London.
'We take these threats of assassination incredibly seriously and they are obviously illegal and those individuals who are citing violence ought to be considered for prosecution,' Ms Robinson said.
Ms Robinson said both she and fellow British-based Assange lawyer Mark Stephens had been followed and had their phone calls interfered with since taking on the case, but declined to say who she thought was monitoring them.
Ms Robinson said any arrest of Julian Assange would not prevent the publication of more of the 250,000 leaked documents that WikiLeaks is holding, as media groups have agreed an 'orderly' publishing schedule for the coming months.
Australian Prime Minister Julia Gillard slammed the publication of leaked confidential diplomatic cables by WikiLeaks as 'grossly irresponsible,' saying the information was gathered through an 'illegal act.'
Pressed on what Australian laws had been broken by WikiLeaks or Mr Assange, Ms Gillard said federal police were investigating and would advise her 'about potential criminal conduct of the individual involved'.
'The foundation stone of WikiLeaks was an illegal act,' Ms Gillard told reporters in Canberra.
'Let's not try top put any glosses on this, information would not be on WikiLeaks had there not been an illegal act undertaken.'
This is going to be very interesting indeed. Wikileaks has recently claimed that it has some sort of major piece of information (I believe one of the newspapers quoted them as saying it was "thermonuclear level") which would be released in the event of Assange being arrested, killed or dissappeared. It'll be interesting to see just where Assange ends up, and whether Wikileaks will release this piece of information.