29 May 2012
WikiLeaks under threat: Assange extradition judgement tomorrow
To: wl-press[at]lists.riseup.net
Date: Tue, 29 May 2012 14:11:17 -0700 (PDT)
From: Wikileaks Press Office
<press-office[at]wikileaks.org>
Subject: [WIKILEAKS] CORRECTION
C O R R E C T I O N
In the section on Swedish complicity, the text of the fourth paragraph reads
"...Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, who was revealed as a US informant
in a 2007 State Department cable published by WikiLeaks."
This is an error. The cable referred to is an American diplomatic cable from
1973, not 2007.
__________
To: wl-press[at]lists.riseup.net
Date: Tue, 29 May 2012 12:08:48 -0700 (PDT)
From: Wikileaks Press Office <press-office[at]wikileaks.org>
Subject: [WIKILEAKS] WikiLeaks under threat: Assange extradition judgement
tomorrow
List-Archive:
<https://lists.riseup.net/www/arc/wl-press>
PRESS RELEASE
State of play of attacks against WikiLeaks to date Tuesday May 29, 2012 20:30
GMT
----------------------- Summary -----------------------
US GOVERNMENT ATTACK ON WIKILEAKS
* WikiLeaks is under attack. The United States is seeking to charge Julian
Assange - a journalist and publisher - with espionage.
* The US Grand Jury reportedly possesses a sealed indictment, which could
be used to extradite Assange to the United States.
* Secret subpoenas have been served on ISPs and online services for the private
data of WikiLeaks staff and supporters.
* Special task-forces have been setup by various various US intelligence
agencies, including the Pentagon, CIA, FBI, and the US State Department.
* Associates of WikiLeaks have been detained and interrogated at US and UK
airports, their equipment confiscated, and attempts have been made to turn
them into informants.
* If the indictment is unsealed upon Assange's extradition to Sweden he faces
further removal from Sweden to the United States.
* Meanwhile, an unprecedented extralegal denial of service by Visa and Mastercard
has cut off funding to WikiLeaks, almost shutting down WikiLeaks' publishing
activity.
THREAT OF EXTRADITION
* If the extradition to Sweden is quashed in the outcome of the court judgement,
he faces extradition from the United Kingdom.
* Both Swedish and UK governments have been coordinating with the US, taking
steps to facilitate a US extradition request in either eventuality. Assange
cannot take steps to avoid either risk. For 539 days he has been detained
without charge in the UK under house arrest.
* Under US pressure the Australian government has relaxed its own extradition
law, smoothing any possible extradition from Assange's home country. The
Gillard government has also amended legislation to give Australian intelligence
agencies powers of surveillance over WikiLeaks supporters.
----------------------- Full Brief -----------------------
WikiLeaks is under serious threat. The US, UK, Swedish and Australian governments
are engaging in a coordinated effort to extradite its editor-in-chief Julian
Assange to the United States, to face espionage charges for journalistic
activities. GRAND JURY For twenty-one months a Grand Jury sitting in the
Washington DC area has been meeting on a monthly basis, seeking to prosecute
Julian Assange for espionage.
Read More
No judge or defense counsel is present at these proceedings. According to
the global intelligence firm Stratfor, a sealed indictment against Assange
was issued 18 months ago, in January 2011.
Read More
Source
In connection with the case, individuals have been legally compelled to give
evidence to the Grand Jury.
Read
More
Google, Twitter, and other internet service providers have been issued secret
court orders to divulge private information about WikiLeaks staff, volunteers
and supporters.
Read More
Friends and supporters of WikiLeaks have been detained, searched and interrogated
at airports, and attempts have been made to turn them into informants.
Read
More
Please consult Alexa O'Brien's
timeline of US vs. Manning, Assange, Wikileaks and the
Press for comprehensive information on the Grand Jury and associated
matters.
AUSTRALIAN COMPLICITY
Australia quietly changed its extradition law three months ago. An amendment
passed in February makes it possible for someone to be extradited for minor
offenses. This amendment weakens the security of all Australians, and facilitates
Assange's extradition from his home country, despite popular support for
him there. There was no media reportage on the passage of this amendment.
Read More
Declassified Australian diplomatic cables reveal that Australian diplomats
have raised no concerns over the possible extradition of Julian Assange to
the United States. The Australian government asks only that it be forewarned,
so as to coordinate a media response.
Read More
Supplementary
The Australian government also passed the 'WikiLeaks Amendment' in July 2011,
broadening the powers of Australia's ASIO intelligence agency to spy on
Australian citizens and anyone associated with WikiLeaks.
Read More
At the behest of the US government, Prime Minister Julia Gillard instigated
a federal investigation into whether criminal charges could be brought against
Assange. Before it had been concluded that Assange has broken no laws, Gillard
had already publicly called Assange's actions "illegal" and stated that his
passport may be cancelled.
Read More
Supplementary
The Australian government has repeatedly delayed, censored and blocked Freedom
of Information (FOI) requests for material that would reveal its internal
legal deliberations over Assange's extradition to the US and has refused
to answer parliamentary questions about the extent of its co-operation.
Read More
Supplementary
It has given only cursory assistance regarding a highly irregular and politicized
Swedish extradition request for Julian Assange under the European Arrest
Warrant (EAW) system.
Read
More
Supplementary
Please see Sweden Versus Assange's
Australia
page for more comprehensive information on Australian complicity.
UK COMPLICITY
Assange has been detained under house arrest without charge for 539 days.
If his May 30 Supreme Court challenge is successful, he is at risk of extradition
to the US under the terms of a one-sided UK/US extradition treaty.
Read
More
Long-promised reform of the UK's extradition arrangements continue to be
delayed, and this is despite the findings of two Parliamentary Select Committees
that reform is urgent.
See §5
The US government is directly involved. A February FOI request revealed the
involvement of Attorney General Eric Holder and other US officials in the
Baker Review on UK extradition reform. The UK government has refused to publish
the evidence on which the Baker Review based its findings. Other FOI requests
specific to Julian Assange have been denied.
Read
More
US Ambassador Louis Susman confirmed that the US would wait to see "how things
work out in the British courts."
Watch
Mr Susman has been granted extraordinary access to directly address the UK
Parliament and its Select Committees, arguing that reform of the UK/US
extradition treaty is unnecessary.
Read More
SWEDISH COMPLICITY
On 8 December 2010 the Independent newspaper in the UK cited "diplomatic
sources" confirming informal talks between Sweden and the US about extraditing
Julian Assange.
Read More
The US/Sweden bilateral treaty has a "temporary surrender" clause which can
be used for onward transfer to the US, circumventing the safeguards of a
formal extradition.
Read
More
Sweden was condemned by the UN Committee Against Torture in 2005 for
its role in the extraordinary rendition of refugees to CIA black
sites.Read More
Sweden has not refused a US request for extradition since 2000.
Read More
The Swedish Prime Minister's chief political adviser is Karl Rove, infamous
for coordinating smear campaigns while he was George Bush's adviser.
Read More
Rove is an old associate of Swedish Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, who was
revealed as a US informant in a 2007 State Department cable published by
WikiLeaks.
Read More
Senior Swedish political figures have made false and/or misleading public
statements highly prejudicial to a fair trial for Julian Assange. These include
Prime Minister Reinfeldt,
Swedish
Foreign Minister Carl Bildt, Sweden's
Prosecutor-General Anders Perklev, investigating prosecutor
Marianne
Ny and
Justice Minister Beatrice Ask. Justice Minister Ask
visited US Attorney General Eric Holder in Washington
on 27 February 2012 but no statements outlining what was discussed have been
issued.
IRREGULARITIES IN THE SWEDISH CASE
There are numerous concerns regarding the merits and lawfulness of the Swedish
case against Assange, including:
the two complainants to the case went to the police for advice about
HIV tests. They did not wish to file a complaint. One complainant has stated
she felt "railroaded" by police. On hearing that police were seeking Julian
Assange for rape, she became upset and did not sign her statement;
there have been unlawful and prrejudicial disclosures to the media
by police and the prosecution regarding the investigation. These have generated
over 4 million websearch results linking 'Assange' and 'rape', irreparably
harming his reputation and diminishing public support for WikiLeaks;
afterr reviewing the police file, Senior Prosecutor Eva Finne found
the rape allegation to be false: "I consider there are no grounds for suspecting
he has committed rape";
therre have been breaches of police procedures in the investigation
of the allegations, in particular: complainant witness statements were not
recorded and were later revised;
the failure to disclose details of the allegations and the evidence
in English;
the apparrent failure of the Prosecutor to consider exculpatory evidence,
and the withholding of exculpatory evidence from the defense and the UK courts;
the disproportionate behavior oof the Prosecutor Marianne Ny in refusing
voluntary offers for co-operation and refusing to make use of the normal
methods of Mutual Legal Assistance for interviewing Assange innsisting
instead on an international warrant which unduly restricts his liberty. The
EAW and a public Interpol Red Notice were issued two days prior to WikiLeaks'
Cablegate publication;
the pre-trial detention conditions incommunicado in solitary
confinement - sought by the Prosecutor prior to any decision whether
to prosecute, and their lack of a time limit; and
the prospect of a secrett trial, which is customary under Swedish
law. Please consult Sweden Versus Assange's "Prosecution page for comprehensive
information on the irregularities in the Swedish case.
Click
Here
Under the EAW system UK courts are unable to take any of the above into account.
Julian Assange has not been charged with any crime. The Swedish extradition
is for questioning as part of the preliminary investigation. Neither the
UK Extradition Act 2003 nor the EU Framework Directive intended EAWs to be
used in this manner. Julian Assange's extradition under such circumstances
will set dangerous precedents affecting basic justice across Europe, whereby
extradition is possible from the UK without charge, without evidence, at
the behest of any prosecutor anywhere in Europe and without proper judicial
oversight.
FURTHER AGGRESSION AGAINST WIKILEAKS
Other related acts of aggression against WikiLeaks include:
Leading actiive US politicians have called for the extrajudicial
assassination of Julian Assange, including by drone strike. US senators have
labelled our editor-in-chief a "high-tech terrorist" and "enemy combatant"
engaged in "cyber warfare".
Read More
The setting up of a 120-strong US Pentagon team dedicated to "taking
action" against WikiLeaks ahead of WikiLeaks' release of the Iraq War Logs
and Cablegate. Similar publicly declared FBI, CIA and US State Department
Task Forces are also still in operation.
Red More
Requestts from US government figures that American banking corporations
Visa, Mastercard, Paypal, Western Union and Bank of America impose an illegal
financial blockade against the organization, blocking the ability of members
of the public to make donations, thereby shutting off 95% of WikiLeaks' funding.
In December 2010 Paypal also froze 60,000 euros of WikiLeaks donations held
by the Wau Holland charitable foundation. Two days later Swiss bank PostFinance
froze Julian Assange's account, containing 31,000 euros, used for WikiLeaks
Staff Defence Funds. The WikiLeaks blockade has been condemned by both the
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights and the UN Rapporteur for Freedom of
Opinion and Expression. In July 2011 WikiLeaks lodged a complaint about the
financial blockade with the European Commission for infringement of EU Anti-Trust
laws. We are still awaiting an answer, due by August 2012.
Read
More
The US governnment has also pressured internet providers to cease
services to WikiLeaks.org. On 1 December 2010 Amazon removed WikiLeaks from
their storage servers, and on 2 December the DNS service pointing to the
Wikileaks.org domain was disrupted.
Read More
WikiiLeaks' volunteers and associates have endured constant harassment,
being detained at US border points, having their electronic devices seized
and secret so-called 2703(d) orders issued for their Twitter records. The
latter only came to light when Twitter challenged the injunction against
letting individuals know their records were being turned over to federal
authorities. It is not yet known how many other internet service providers
received similar 2703(d) orders relating to WikiLeaks so far,
only Google and ISP Sonic.net have been confirmed.
Read More
See
Also
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