Arab Times

Support for Assange ahead of hearing

Bid to pressure UK government

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LONDON, Feb 23, (AP): Hundreds of supporters of Julian Assange marched through London on Saturday to pressure the UK government into refusing to extradite the WikiLeaks founder to the United States to face spying charges.

Famous backers, including Pink Floyd’s Roger Waters, Pretenders singer Chrissie Hynde and fashion designer Vivienne Westwood joined the crowd protesting the U.S. espionage charges against the founder of the secret-spilling website. An extraditio­n hearing for Assange is due to begin in a London court on Monday.

WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson told a rally outside Parliament that the prosecutio­n of Assange represente­d “a dark force against (those) who want justice, transparen­cy and truth.”

U.S. prosecutor­s have charged the 48-year-old Australian computer expert with espionage over WikiLeaks’ publicatio­n of hundreds of thousands of confidenti­al government documents. If found guilty, he could be sentenced to up to 175 years in prison.

American authoritie­s say Assange conspired with US Army intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to hack into a Pentagon computer and release secret diplomatic cables and

way to vote in a new state government without the support of a far-right party, avoiding a repeat of a decision earlier this month that caused a political uproar at the national level.

Thuringia state lawmakers from several parties said late Friday that they agreed to hold another vote next month to choose the state’s governor and to have the next state elections in April 2021.

An earlier vote in parliament led to the ouster of Thuringia’s incumbent governor. A pro-business candidate won the office only because lawmakers from the far-right Alternativ­e for Germany (AfD) party supported him along with state representa­tives from the regional branch of Chancellor Angela Merkel’s Christian Democratic Union.

The Free Democrat’s Thomas Kemmerich’s military files on the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Assange argues he acted as a journalist and is therefore entitled to First Amendment protection. He also maintains the documents exposed wrongdoing and protected many people.

Civil liberties groups and journalism organizati­ons, including Amnesty Internatio­nal and Reporters Without Borders, have urged the US to drop the charges, saying they set a chilling precedent for freedom of the press.

More than 40 jurists from the UK, the US, France and other countries published a letter Saturday asking the British government to reject the extraditio­n request. They accused the US of “extraterri­torial overreach” in seeking to prosecute an Australian who was based in the UK.

Assange is currently incarcerat­ed in London’s high-security Belmarsh Prison, having previously spent seven years inside the Embassy of Ecuador.

He holed up in the South American country’s UK diplomatic mission in 2012 to avoid being sent to Sweden to face questionin­g over rape and sexual assault allegation­s. That case has since been dropped.

Assange was evicted from the embassy

acceptance of AfD’s votes - and the Christian Democrats’ voting with far-right colleagues - appalled left-leaning parties and many in the mainstream center-right

Vucic

Putin

in April 2019 and arrested by British police for jumping bail seven years earlier.

Assange’s legal team argues that the case against him is politicall­y motivated. His lawyers said they would present evidence they claim shows that Assange was offered a pardon if he agreed to say Russia was not involved in leaking Democratic National Committee emails during the 2016 US presidenti­al election campaign.

Emails embarrassi­ng for the Democrats and Hillary Clinton’s presidenti­al campaign were hacked before being published by WikiLeaks in 2016.

Assange’s lawyers say the offer was made in August 2017 by thenRepubl­ican Congressma­n Dana Rohrabache­r, who claimed to be acting on behalf of President Donald Trump.

The White House called the claim “a complete fabricatio­n and a total lie.”

Rohrabache­r said in a statement that he told Assange “that if he could provide me informatio­n and evidence about who actually gave him the DNC emails, I would then call on President Trump to pardon him. At no time did I offer a deal made by the President, nor did I say I was representi­ng the President.”

camp. Merkel called Kemmerich’s election “inexcusabl­e.” (AP)

Slovaks mark anniversar­y:

Thousands of people rallied in Bratislava and across Slovakia on Friday to mark the second anniversar­y of the slayings of an investigat­ive reporter and his fiancee.

Jan Kuciak and Martina Kusnirova were shot dead in their home on Feb. 21, 2018.

The killings prompted major street protests unseen since the 1989 anti-communist Velvet Revolution in Czechoslov­akia.

The ensuing political crisis led to the collapse of a coalition government headed by populist Prime Minister Robert Fico and the dismissal of the national police chief. (AP)

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