US rapper A$AP Rocky faces assault charges in a Stockholm court on Tuesday over a June street brawl, after weeks of detention which has stirred diplomatic tensions and fan outrage.
The 30-year-old rapper, whose real name is Rakim Mayers, was arrested on July 3 along with three other people following the fight in Stockholm on June 30. One of them, the rapper's bodyguard, was later released.
Part of the brawl was captured in an amateur video published by US celebrity news outlet TMZ, where the rapper can be seen throwing a young man into the street and then aiming several punches at him while he is down.
Mayers, who faces maximum jail time of two years if convicted of assault, has claimed he was acting in self-defence, saying he was responding to harassment and provocations by the plaintiff.
The trial is scheduled to start at 9:30 am (0730 GMT) at the Stockholm District Court.
The precise circumstances of the brawl remain unclear, but before his arrest the rapper published videos of his own to Instagram purporting to show the lead-up to the fight.
More From This Section
In those, the young man can be seen arguing with the musician over a pair of headphones, and the artist repeatedly asks the man and his friend to stop following him and his entourage. One of the young men can also been hitting the artist's bodyguard.
A separate investigation into the plaintiff was dropped with prosecutors saying his actions were in self-defence.
Despite the rapper's pleas of self-defence, prosecutor Daniel Suneson decided to press assault charges against the musician and two members of his entourage on July 25, stating that he believed what happened still amounted to a crime.
In announcing his decision to press charges, Suneson stressed that he "had more material to consider than what has been available on the internet".
According to the charge document filed with the Stockholm District Court, the evidence includes surveillance footage, witness testimony and text conversations that the prosecutor says prove there was no need for self-defence and that a bottle was used as a weapon in the alleged assault.
Photos of the alleged victim, taken by investigators, were published by Swedish media last week, revealing wounds seemingly caused by a sharp object.
Swedish law enforcement has also been accused of racism, and former US ambassador to Sweden Mark Brzezinski called the rapper's arrest a matter of "racial injustice".
But Mayers' lawyer Slobodan Jovicic has questioned the accusation, telling a press briefing last week that he thought Sweden was "not a racist society".
On July 5 the Stockholm District Court ordered that Mayers be kept in custody while the case was being investigated, and he has remained in a Swedish remand prison awaiting trial.
The musician, who had his breakthrough in 2011 with the release of the mixtape "Live. Love. A$AP", was on a European tour and has already had to cancel over a dozen shows.
Throughout his detention, fans, fellow artists and US Congress members have campaigned for his release.
An online petition called #JusticeForRocky has garnered more than 630,000 signatures, and social media campaigns encouraging fans to boycott Swedish brands such as IKEA have been launched.
The case has also seen repeated attempts at intervention by President Donald Trump, who personally called Swedish Prime Minister Stefan Lofven to discuss the matter.
In a subsequent tweet, Trump said he vouched for the rapper and offered to pay his bail, even though Sweden's justice system has no provisions for bail.
But the district court deemed Mayer to be a flight risk and ordered his continued detention.
Lofven's press secretary Toni Eriksson told AFP that "the prime minister was careful to point out that the Swedish justice system is completely independent".
Upon learning that the case would go to trial, Trump vented his frustration on Twitter.
"Very disappointed in Prime Minister Stefan Lofven for being unable to act," Trump tweeted, adding: "Give A$AP Rocky his FREEDOM." Several Swedish politicians fired back at Trump for trying to interfere in the judicial process.
"Political interference in the process is distinctly off limits! Clear?" former Swedish prime minister Carl Bildt tweeted.
Disclaimer: No Business Standard Journalist was involved in creation of this content