Talks
and diplomacy: UK mulls Assange solution with Ecuador
Britain
is considering talks with Ecuador to discuss the future of WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange, according to the UK’s Foreign Office. This
would be the first major step towards resolving a one-year diplomatic
stand-off.
RT,
3
June, 2013
The
Foreign Office announced that it is considering taking up Ecuador’s
Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino’s request to set up a meeting with
Britain's Foreign Secretary William Hague when Patino will visits
London later in June.
"We're
considering that request. We hope the visit will contribute to our
joint commitment to finding a diplomatic solution to this issue,"
Reuters quoted a spokeswoman as saying.
Julian
Assange has been inside of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since
June 2012 in order to avoid extradition to Sweden where he is wanted
for questioning in regards to allegation of sex crimes, which he has
denied.
He
refuses to go to Sweden unless it guarantees that it won’t
extradite him to the US, where Assange faces espionage charges over
data released by WikiLeaks. According to his lawyers, if sent to the
US he is likely to face trial and possibly even the death penalty
over WikiLeaks' release of thousands of classified US diplomatic
cables.
Ecuador
has given Assange asylum and houses him in a small basement room in
its London embassy. UK law enforcement keeps a close eye on the
embassy, ready to arrest Assange should he leave the
diplomatically-protected building. Embassy in
London on August 19, 2012 (AFP Photo / Carl
The
cost of the surveillance, which is believed to involve two police
vehicles and eight officers on duty at all times, is now over $16,500
a day, Scotland Yard recently reported. The operation cost British
taxpayers over $5 million since Assange got his refuge on June 19,
2012. By the time of the anniversary, the sum is expected to have
exceeded $6.3 million.
The
WikiLeaks
Party
submitted its registration to the Australian Electoral Commission in
April and has secured over 1,000 fee-paying members, more than double
the 500 members required for registration. Assange is planning to run
for a senate seat.
Assange
is preparing for a tough remote campaign. If elected, he still may
not be physically present at the Australian Senate if he remains
trapped in the embassy. Assange's running mate could sit in for the
WikiLeaks founder if he wins the race but is unable to leave the
embassy.
The
Foreign Office’s announcement comes on the day the trial
of Bradley Manning, the United States Army private responsible for
the biggest intelligence leak in US history, begins. US authorities
arrested Manning in May 2010 and accused him of sending hundreds of
thousands of sensitive government files to the anti-secrecy website
WikiLeaks.
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