Sweden:
If Assange faces death row in US we won’t extradite him
The
Swedish government will not extradite Assange to the US should he
face the death penalty there, as any possible extradition request
from Washington is then subject to strict conditions, an official
from the country’s Justice Ministry declared.
RT,
22
August, 2012
“We
will never surrender a person to the death penalty,” the
deputy director of the Service for Criminal Cases and International
Cooperation of Sweden’s Justice Ministry said in an interview with
the Frankfurter Rundschau newspaper on Tuesday.
This
means there should be strict guarantees from the US government
that “the
prisoner will not be executed in any case,” added
Cecilia Riddselius. But, she added, so far her country has not
received any extradition request from Washington.
In June, Cecilia Riddselius admitted there were opportunities for countries to request different types of guarantees in relation to extradition. Sweden may request that an extradited person will not be sentenced to the death penalty, he or she will not be tortured, should not be prosecuted for offences other than those which he or she was delivered for and not to be charged before a special court.
However,
Riddselius then stressed, Sweden cannot guarantee in advance that
Assange will not be extradited.
The
WikiLeaks founder is wanted in Sweden for questioning over sexual
misconduct. He and his supporters, however, fear that if extradited
to Sweden, he may be further extradited to the United States, where
he could then face the death penalty for espionage following the
publication of thousands of classified documents, including secret
cables of the US State Department.
Last
week, the Ecuadorian government announced it has granted the
world-famous whistleblower political
asylum.
The decision came almost two months after Assange took refuge in the
country’s London embassy seeking protection from extradition to
Sweden.
The
decision has already become the epicenter of a diplomatic row between
Ecuador and Great Britain, with London threatening to storm the
embassy. Ecuador has already taken the issue to the Union
of South American Nations(UNASUR),
which unanimously backed the country’s right to grant Assange
asylum and condemned British threats to raid a sovereign state’s
embassy in order to arrest him.
Ecuador
also promised to
appeal to the International Court of Justice (ICJ)
if the UK refuses to grant Julian Assange safe passage out of the
country.
According
to WikiLeaks, all of this could be avoided if they managed to obtain
a guarantee of no re-extradition from Sweden.
A spokesperson for WikiLeaks stressed that Assange would “gladly go to Sweden for questioning if they were able to guarantee that [he] wouldn’t be extradited to the United States”.
While
deciding on Assange’s political asylum Ecuador also offered Sweden
the chance to question him at the embassy, but Stockholm brushed away
the possibility.
Correa:
Storming embassy to seize Assange would be UK’s 'political suicide'
The
Ecuadorian president has warned Britain not to enter the country’s
embassy to seize Julian Assange. Rafael Correa said that doing so
would be an act of “political suicide” that would leave UK
embassies vulnerable the world over.
RT,
22
August, 2012
Correa
said that if British authorities forced their way into embassy to
arrest the WikiLeaks founder, then other people could enter British
diplomatic premises all around the world and the UK “wouldn’t be
able to say a thing.”
During
his statement on Monday, he condemned Britain for threatening to
invade the embassy, in a move he described as “intolerable.”
"While
the United Kingdom hasn't retracted nor apologized, the danger still
exists. Remember that David beat Goliath. And with many Davids, it's
easier to bring down a number of Goliaths,” Correa said to Ecuador
TV.
“So
we’re hoping for clear and coherent backing because this violates
all inter-American law, all international law, the Vienna Convention
and all diplomatic traditions of the last, at least, 300 years on a
global scale,” Correa continued.
Assange
is wanted in Sweden for questioning on sexual assault allegations. He
denies the claims, and fears being extradited to the US if he travels
to Stockholm to contest the accusations.
Supporters
of the whistleblower fear Assange has been secretly indicted by a
grand jury in the US, after WikiLeaks published secret American
diplomatic cables in 2010.
Ecuador
has granted Assange asylum because neither Britain nor Sweden would
offer a guarantee that they would prevent his extradition to the
United States.
Correa
says he believes there is sufficient cause to believe Assange would
be denied due process in the US and could face life in prison or the
death penalty.
Tensions
between Quito and the UK remain high, two months after Assange sought
refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy.
Despite
Ecuador’s offer of asylum, Assange cannot leave for the airport
because the British Foreign Office (FCO) refuses to grant him a safe
passage.
"We
will not allow Mr Assange safe passage out of the United Kingdom, nor
is there any legal basis for us to do so," British Foreign
Secretary William Hague said in a statement.
On
Sunday, Assange made his first public appearance since entering the
embassy, calling on Washington to “renounce its witch-hunt”
against WikiLeaks.
The
41-year-old Australian also thanked Ecuador for taking a “stand for
justice.”
Other
South American countries have endorsed Ecuador’s asylum decision,
including Cuba, Venezuela, Bolivia, Nicaragua, and Argentina.
Foreign
Ministers from across South America are urging dialogue between Quito
and London.
Anonymous
avenge Assange by hitting UK govt sites


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