From: Portside Moderator [ <mailto:[email protected]>
mailto:[email protected]]
(1)

Julian Assange Takes Aim At United States As Row Deepens Speech from balcony
of Ecuador's London embassy calls on Barack Obama to abandon 'witch-hunt'
against WikiLeaks

Luke Harding and Ben Quinn 

The Guardian: 19 August 2012

 <http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/aug/19/julian-assange-takes-aim-us>
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2012/aug/19/julian-assange-takes-aim-us

[moderator: the Guardian also offers this link to video of the statement
<http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/video/2012/aug/19/julian-assange-statement-
ecuadorean-embassy-video>
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/video/2012/aug/19/julian-assange-statement-e
cuadorean-embassy-video]

The diplomatic standoff between Britain and Ecuador deepened on Sunday after
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange used an extraordinary appearance on the
first- floor balcony of Ecuador's London embassy to berate the United
States.

With Metropolitan police officers watching from metres away, Assange called
on President Obama to abandon what he called a "witch-hunt" against
WikiLeaks. He said an alleged "FBI investigation" against his whistleblowing
website should be "dissolved" and that the US should go back to its original
"revolutionary" values.

"As WikiLeaks stands under threat, so does the freedom of expression and the
health of our societies," Assange said, standing on a white balcony just
above the pavement, and flanked by Ecuador's yellow, blue and red flag. He
added: "I ask President Obama to do the right

thing: the United States must renounce its witch-hunt against WikiLeaks."

Assange also thanked Ecuador's social democrat president, Rafael Correa, for
granting him political asylum. Correa's decision, announced last Thursday,
has set off a growing international row. Assange also thanked several other
Latin American countries for their support - implicitly warning Britain that
any dispute with Ecuador could rapidly snowball into a conflict with the
entire region.

More than 50 police officers surrounded the embassy in Knightsbridge,
south-west London, on Sunday, with a police helicopter in the skies above,
but they were clearly under orders not to try to arrest the WikiLeaks
founder. Assange addressed around 100 well-wishers, with supporters
including Tariq Ali and former British ambassador Craig Murray making
speeches from the street.

Assange spoke for 10 minutes. He appeared cheerful, if unsurprisingly pale.
This was his first public appearance since he slipped into the embassy two
months ago and the latest surreal episode in a soap opera that has seen him
go from the High Court to house arrest in Norfolk and now to an embassy
camp-bed in genteel Kensington and Chelsea, less than 50m from Harrods.

The 41-year-old Australian took refuge in the embassy after the supreme
court ordered his extradition to Sweden, where he faces allegations of
serious sexual misconduct. Assange pointedly did not mention those
allegations on Sunday, instead casting his predicament as a universal one of
free speech struggling to survive in a "dangerous and oppressive world".
Britain says it is obliged to implement EU extradition law and will arrest
Assange the second he leaves the building.

Speaking from the balcony in SW1, Assange claimed that the Met had come
close to storming the embassy late last Wednesday. Britain sent a letter to
Ecuador last week stating that it believes it is entitled to arrest Assange
inside the building under the Diplomatic and Consular Premises Act 1987. The
claim has enraged the government in Quito, which says the 1961 Vienna
convention protects its - and others' - diplomatic territory.

Assange said: "Inside this embassy in the dark, I could hear teams of police
swarming up inside the building through its internal fire escape." He said
the only reason the UK "did not throw away the Vienna convention the other
night" was because "the world is watching". He also thanked embassy staff,
"who have shown me hospitality and kindness, despite the threats we all
received".

Despite the heavy police presence on Sunday, the Foreign Office is clearly
trying to find a diplomatic solution to the row with Ecuador. Foreign
secretary William Hague has made it clear there is no suggestion that police
would "storm" the embassy.

But Assange's provocative balcony appearance, in which he praised
"courageous Ecuador" while disparaging Britain, his long-suffering host
country, will have won him few new friends in Downing Street. Assange's
supporters claim that if he is sent to Sweden he is in danger of being
extradited to the US to be charged with espionage. Sweden has vehemently
denied this.

On Sunday Assange said: "Will it [the US] return to and reaffirm the
revolutionary values it was founded on, or will it lurch off the precipice,
dragging us all into a dangerous and oppressive world?"

He said there should be no "foolish talk" about prosecuting media
organisations, mentioning not only WikiLeaks but also the New York Times, a
paper Assange has previously bitterly criticised.

He also called on the US to end its "war on whistleblowers", and demanded
that Bradley Manning, the US army intelligence analyst suspected of leaking
information, be released.

Manning has been charged with transferring classified data and delivering
national defence information to an unauthorised source. He faces up to 52
years in jail.

Assange called him a hero and "an example to all of us"

- drawing cheers from WikiLeaks fans packing the Knightsbridge pavement. "On
Wednesday, Bradley Manning spent his 815th day of detention without trial,"
Assange said. "The legal maximum is 120 days."

Assange also made a rare mention of his children, "who have been denied
their father". He said he hoped soon to be back with them and the rest of
his family, adding:

"Forgive me, we will be reunited soon."

(2)

Julian Assange Row: Ecuador backed by South American Nations

19 August 2012

 <http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-19314618>
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-19314618

Ecuador's decision to grant Wikileaks founder Julian Assange asylum has been
backed by foreign ministers from countries across South America.

A document agreed at the Union of South American Nations meeting in Ecuador
said it supported the country "in the face of the threat" to its London
embassy, where he has taken refuge.

The UK has said it could potentially lift the embassy's diplomatic status.

Mr Assange faces extradition to Sweden over sexual assault claims he denies.

Ecuador's President Rafael Correa has suggested Mr Assange could co-operate
with Sweden if assurances are given that there would be no extradition to a
third country.

Supporters of Mr Assange - who on Sunday urged the US to end its
"witch-hunt" against the Wikileaks site - claim he could face persecution
and even the death penalty if sent there.

'Explicit threat'

After Ecuador's Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino finished reading the final
declaration from the Union of South American Nations (Unasur) summit, he
joined hands with his fellow foreign ministers and raised them aloft.

The BBC's Will Grant said it was a symbolic but important show of unity in a
region which considers the UK government's approach over Mr Assange to have
been colonialist and threatening.

Ecuador has described a letter from the British government drawing attention
to the Diplomatic and Consular Premises Act 1987 as "intolerable" and an
"explicit threat".

The act could allow the UK to lift the diplomatic status of Ecuador's
embassy in London to allow police to enter the building to arrest Mr Assange
for breaching his bail terms.

Mr Assange has been at the embassy since 19 June. Five days earlier, the
UK's Supreme Court dismissed his bid to reopen an appeal against his
extradition to Sweden.

He had been on bail while the case was being considered and, after the
Supreme Court result, was given a further two-week grace period.

It is an established international convention that local police and security
forces are not permitted to enter an embassy, unless they have the express
permission of the ambassador.

That principle was backed by the ministers at the Unasur summit. In their
final document, they agreed on a series of general principles, including as
"the inviolability of local diplomatic missions and consular offices".

'War on whistle-blowers'

Our correspondent said that - in the context of the UK's perceived
heavy-handed approach to the recent question of Argentina's renewed claim
over the Falkland Islands - the British government's reputation in South
America was undoubtedly being affected by this stand-off.

But the last point of agreement in the Unasur document called for calm,
urging the parties involved to "continue the dialogue and negotiation to
find a mutually acceptable solution".

On Sunday, Mr Assange, 41, used his first public statement since entering
the embassy - delivered from a balcony - to call on the US to stop its "war
on whistle- blowers".

The US is carrying out an investigation into Wikileaks, which has published
a mass of leaked diplomatic cables, embarrassing several governments and
international businesses.

In 2010, two female ex-Wikileaks volunteers accused Mr Assange, an
Australian citizen, of committing sexual offences against them while he was
in Stockholm to give a lecture.

Mr Assange claims the sex was consensual and the allegations are politically
motivated.

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