'US
not our daddy to punish us' - Ecuador FM Patino to RT
Ecuador
does not fear US revenge for granting asylum to Julian Assange.
Despite America’s power in the world, it is not Ecuador’s “father
or teacher to punish us,” the country’s foreign minister said
exclusively to RT Spanish host Eva Golinger.
RT,
22
August, 2012
“We
don’t think that any punishment is possible, nor do we think that
there is a reason for revenge (let’s call it this way, it is
stronger than “punishment”) for Ecuador’s sovereign decision.
The USA does it every day,” Ricardo Patino said.
Ecuador
believes that the situation around Assange, who is wanted in Sweden
for questioning on sexual assault allegations, will not provoke a
breach in relations between his country and the US because there are
no grounds for the relationship to worsen.
“The
only difference is that it may appear now that a small,
less-developed country has fewer rights to protect freedom and lives
of other people than world powers,” Patino told Eva Golinger, RT
Spanish TV host, lawyer and writer. “We have the same rights as
they do. We will not accept any revenge in any case,” he stressed.
Ecuador
has granted Assange asylum after neither Britain nor Sweden would
grant assurances that he would not be re-extradited to the United
States.
Assange’s
supporters fear that he would meet the same fate as Bradley Manning,
the man arrested in May 2010 for allegedly providing classified
materials to WikiLeaks. He is likely to get life in prison if
convicted.
Julian
Assange and his legal team believe that he has already been secretly
indicted by a grand jury in the US, for publishing thousands of
secret documents including American diplomatic cables.
However,
the US State Department denies they are seeking to prosecute Assange.
“We
reject it completely,” spokesperson Victoria Nuland declared
commenting on Ecuador’s decision to grant asylum to Assange.
‘UK
should apologize, and then we can talk’
Ecuador
remains concerned about the UK’s threats to raid its embassy in
London where the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, has found refuge.
Ecuador’s
official announcement that it is granting political asylum became the
epicenter of a diplomatic row between Ecuador and Great Britain, with
the latter threatening to storm the embassy in London or arrest
Assange once he leaves it.
Ecuador
responded with anger saying that the times of colonies are gone and
Ecuador is an independent country- Asserting that breaking into the
ambassadorial premises of a foreign state would be a “flagrant
violation” of the Vienna Convention on Diplomatic Relations.
“We
have not got any statement from the UK which denies this [threat],”
Patino said.
On
the contrary, the UK keeps announcing that it will extradite Assange
to Sweden regardless Ecuador’s decisions, he reminded.
UK
Foreign Secretary William Hague made a statement after the asylum was
granted, saying that Britain will continue its efforts to extradite
"alleged criminal" Assange to Sweden because it does not
recognize his asylum status.
Patino
stressed that the UK should apologize to Ecuador – in a written
form – for their threats, or at least admit that they have made a
mistake. Only after that will the dialogue become possible, he said.
The
best way for the UK to correct its “mistakes” and solve this
tough situation, as Ecuador sees it, would be to grant Assange a safe
passage so that he could “practice freedom of speech, which Great
Britain supposedly respects so much.”
If
Britain stormed Ecuador’s embassy it would lead to very grave
consequences, not only on the part of Ecuador, but also on the part
of the whole Latin America, Patino said.
However,
he believes “nothing like that would happen.”
“We
also believe that London will accept Ecuador’s sovereign decision.
If that doesn’t happen, we’ll find a way out,” Patino said.
On
August 17 Ecuador said it may appeal to the International Court of
Justice (ICJ) if the UK refuses to grant Julian Assange safe passage
out of the country.
‘Assange
– free speech icon’
One
of the main reasons behind Ecuador’s decision to grant political
asylum to Assange is protection of freedom of speech, Patino stressed
– as well as the right to life, right to personal integrity, and
right to freedom from political persecution.
And
Julian Assange is an icon of the freedom of speech, the minister
added.
“We
are not doing this as part of election campaign – we are doing it
because there are principles which need to be protected. And Ecuador
protects them, despite all international media campaigns.”
'Ecuador
ready to go to Hague over Assange asylum' - FM Patino
Ecuador
is prepared to go as far as the International Court of Justice in The
Hague, to defend its sovereign decision to grant asylum to Julian
Assange. Speaking exclusively to RT's Spanish channel, the country's
Foreign Minister said they're standing up to London and Washington to
protect freedom of speech and the right to personal integrity.
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