Bangkok Post

Pink Floyd star joins Assange supporters

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LONDON: Hundreds of people including Roger Waters, co-founder of the Pink Floyd rock group, and designer Vivienne Westwood, marched through central London on Saturday demanding that jailed Wikileaks founder Julian Assange be released.

A London court begins hearings today to decide whether Mr Assange should be extradited to the United States, almost a decade after WikiLeaks enraged Washington by publishing secret US documents.

The 48-year-old, who spent seven years holed up in Ecuador’s London embassy before being dragged out last

April, is wanted by the US on 18 criminal counts of conspiring to hack government computers and violating an espionage law and could spend decades in prison if convicted.

A hero to admirers who say he has exposed abuses of power, Mr Assange is cast by critics as a dangerous enemy of the state who has undermined Western security. He says the extraditio­n is politicall­y motivated by those embarrasse­d by his revelation­s.

Waving placards declaring “Journalism is not a crime”, the protesters on Saturday marched from Australia House to Parliament Square where they were addressed by Mr Assange’s father, John Shipton.

Mr Shipton has said Mr Assange’s long confinemen­t has damaged his health and fears that sending his son to the US would be a death sentence.

On Thursday, Dunja Mijatovic, the Council of Europe’s Human Rights Commission­er, said Assange should not be extradited because it would have a chilling effect on press freedom.

On Friday, Mr Assange’s lawyer Eric Dupond-Moretti told Europe 1 radio that Mr Assange’s legal team would be in contact with French President Emmanuel Macron to make the case for Assange to get asylum in France.

Mr Assange has said his youngest child and the child’s mother are French but a previous asylum request was rejected by France in 2015.

Hopes briefly rose among Assange’s supporters this week on reports that he might even get a pardon from USPresiden­t Donald Trump.

But the White House was quick to deny that Mr Trump had offered to pardon Mr Assange if he were to say that the Russians were not involved in an email leak that damaged Hillary Clinton’s 2016 presidenti­al campaign against Mr Trump.

 ?? REUTERS ?? Singer Roger Waters, far right, attends a protest against the extraditio­n of Julian Assange outside the Australian High Commission in London on Saturday.
REUTERS Singer Roger Waters, far right, attends a protest against the extraditio­n of Julian Assange outside the Australian High Commission in London on Saturday.

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