An
interesting article from the Huffington Post.
Julian
Assange Stuck In London's Ecuador Embassy After Granted Asylum
It was a warning meant
to remind Ecuador that Britain's patience has limits. But as the
stalemate over Julian Assange settled in Friday, it appeared London's
veiled threat that it could storm Ecuador's embassy and drag Assange
out has backfired – drawing supporters to the mission where the
WikiLeaks founder is holed up and prompting angry denunciations from
Ecuador and elsewhere
17
August, 2012
Experts
and ex-diplomats say Britain's Foreign Office, which warned Ecuador
of a little known law that would allow it to side-step usual
diplomatic protocols, messed up by issuing a threat it couldn't back
up.
"It
was a big mistake," said former British ambassador Oliver Miles.
"It puts the British government in the position of asking for
something illegitimate."
Britain's
warning was carried in a set of notes delivered to Ecuadorean
diplomats Wednesday as they tried to negotiate an agreement over
Assange, who has spent nearly two months holed up at the Latin
American nation's London mission in a bid to avoid extradition to
Sweden, where he's wanted over allegations of sexual assault.
The
notes, published by Britain on Thursday, said ominously that keeping
Assange at the embassy was incompatible with international law. They
added: "You should be aware that there is a legal basis in the
U.K. – the Diplomatic and Consular Premises Act – which would
allow us to take action to arrest Mr. Assange in the current premises
of the embassy."
Britain
passed the law in 1987, after a deadly shooting in 1984 in which a
Libyan diplomat opened fire on demonstrators from within his
country's London embassy, killing a British police officer.
The
Ecuadoreans were outraged by the notes, accusing Britain of
threatening to assault their embassy and calling a crisis meeting of
the Union of South American Nations. The ripples from the controversy
continued to spread Friday, with Russia's Ministry of Foreign Affairs
saying in a brief message posted to Twitter that the issue raised
questions about diplomatic protections.
Britain's
Foreign Office insists its missive was "not a threat,"
something that Miles dismissed with a laugh.
"If
I tell you, `I'm not threatening you but I DO have a very large stick
here,' it's a question of semantics," he said.
Assange,
who has been holed up inside Ecuador's small embassy since June 19,
claims the Swedish case is merely the opening gambit in a
Washington-orchestrated plot to make him stand trial in the United
States – something disputed by both Swedish authorities and the
women involved.
In
a radio interview Friday, Ecuador's president Rafael Correa said he
feared that Assange could face a possible death penalty if he was
prosecuted and convicted in the United States.
"I
am not in agreement with everything that Julian Assange has done but
does that mean he deserves the death penalty, life in prison, to be
extradited to a third country. Please! Where is the proportionality
between the crime and the punishment? Where is due process?"
Correa said.
Correa
insisted that his nation was not seeking to undermine Sweden's
attempts to question Assange over allegations made by two women who
accuse him of sexual misconduct during a visit to the country in
mid-2010.
"The
main reason why Julian Assange was given diplomatic asylum was
because his extradition to a third country was not guaranteed, in no
way was it done to interrupt the investigations of Swedish justice
over an alleged crime. In no way," Correa said.
Former
Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon, who is representing Assange pro bono,
would not disclose his legal team's next steps now that Britain has
refused safe passage.
"It's
something we have to study and evaluate, that in the coming days or
weeks we will have to decide," he told The Associated Press by
phone in Colombia.
He
said it would be up to Ecuador, as a sovereign state, to decide
whether to appeal to the International Court of Justice in the Hague
in order to compel Britain to grant Assange safe passage out of the
country.
With
negotiations continuing between Britain, Sweden and Ecuador,
diplomats and legal experts said that the U.K. should never have
raised its legal threat to barge into Ecuador's embassy to detain
Assange.
Some
lawyers have pointed out that the act itself notes that an embassy's
diplomatic status can only be revoked if the move is "permissible
under international law" – a high hurdle to jump given the
age-old deference given to foreign embassy buildings.
Rebecca
Niblock, an extradition lawyer, said it was tough to see how Britain
could follow through on the threat to nab Assange from inside the
embassy, while staying true to what she called "a fundamental
premise of international law."
Extradition
expert Julian Knowles was a dissenting voice, saying that he believed
the Brits could, and would, be able to revoke Ecuadorean embassy's
diplomatic status if Assange persisted in what Knowles described as
"abuse of the rule of law."
Knowles,
who has been critical of Assange, said British officials could arrest
the Australian once the diplomatic and media ferment faded.
"I
think they'll take the view that within a few days or weeks it will
all blow over," he said.
But
most observers backed the sentiment expressed by Britain's former
ambassador to Russia, Tony Brenton, who told BBC radio that the
Foreign Office had "slightly overreached themselves here."
"I
fear the government roared rather like a mouse in this case, and
would be best not to have made that threat," lawyer Alex Carlile
told Sky News.
Britain's
government seems to have toned down its rhetoric. Speaking to
reporters Thursday, British Foreign Secretary William Hague insisted
that Britain would act within the law.
"We
are committed to working with them amicably to resolve the matter,"
he said. "There is no threat here to storm an embassy."

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