Assange to UN: 'It is time for the US to cease its persecution of WikiLeaks'
WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange has called on the United States to move from
words to actions, and put an end to its persecution of WikiLeaks, its
people and its sources. He made the statement during an address to a
panel of UN delegates.
RT,
27
September, 2012
Addressing
the representatives of the United Nations' member countries, the
WikiLeaks founder spoke of the difference between words and actions,
praising US President Barack Obama for his words.
"We
commend and agree with the words that peace can be achieved… But
the time for words has run out. It is time for the US to cease its
persecution of WikiLeaks, our people and our sources."
Assange
was highly critical of US involvement in the Arab Spring, denouncing
Obama as audacious for exploiting it. He added that it is
"disrespectful of the dead" to claim that the US has
supported forces of change.
"Was
it not audacious for the US President to say that his country
supported the forces of change in the Arab Spring? Tunisian history
did not begin in December 2010, and Mohamed Bouazizi did not set
himself on fire so that Barack Obama could be re-elected,"
Assange told the panel.
"The
world knew after reading WikiLeaks that Ben Ali and his government
had for long years enjoyed the indifference, if not the support, of
the US, in full knowledge of its excesses and its crimes. So it must
come as a surprise to the Tunisians that the US supported the forces
of change in their country, and it must come as a surprise to the
Egyptian teenagers who washed American tear gas out of their eyes,
that the US administration supported change in Egypt"
Julian
Assange also spoke at length about Bradley Manning, the US private
accused of supplying WikiLeaks with hundreds of sensitive diplomatic
and military cables. Assange accused the US government of detaining
Manning without charge and mistreating him, even attempting to offer
him a deal in exchange for Manning's testimony against Assange. The
WikiLeaks founder told the UN panel that Bradley Manning, accused of
'death penalty crimes', was "degraded, abused and
psychologically tortured."
He
added that the FBI had produced 42,135 pages of WikiLeaks-related
activity, and less that 8,000 concern Bradley Manning, reiterating
his belief that the US private is being senselessly detained.
Julian
Assange made his address from the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where
he took shelter in June after losing a court battle to avoid
extradition to Sweden. The WikiLeaks founder fears that Sweden, which
wants him for questioning over allegations of sexual assault, will
extradite him to the US for his role in leaking thousands of secret
diplomatic and military cables.
The
British Foreign Office maintains that it has a binding obligation to
arrest Assange once he leaves the embassy grounds. Ecuador’s
Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino, meanwhile, said that allowing
Assange to be transferred to the country’s embassy in Sweden would
be an acceptable compromise for all parties involved, as he would
“remain under our protection while also satisfying the demands of
the Swedish justice system.”
The
Ecuador FM also said that Assange's right to freedom must be
respected.
"I
don’t know any case in history where diplomatic asylum did not end
in freedom for the person. I hope this will not be an exception in
history. Every country must respect the right of the country granting
asylum and the person who was granted it."
Julian
Assange told journalists present at the UN GA panel that "both
the UK and Sweden have refused to offer guarantees" that he
would not be extradited to the US, where both he and WikiLeaks have
been declared 'enemies of the state' by the milatary, putting them in
the same legal category as Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.
The
UK and Sweden have remained silent on the possibility of a
compromise, though both publicly vowed that Assange should not face
special treatment, whether better or worse than normal, under their
legal systems.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.