Times Standard (Eureka)

Australia demands US, UK drop charges against Assange

- Amy Goodman is the host of “Democracy Now!” She is the coauthor, with Denis Moynihan and David Goodman, of “Democracy Now!: 20 Years Covering the Movements Changing America.”

Australian Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said during Prime Minister's Questions on Feb. 15, “This thing cannot just go on and on and on, indefinite­ly.” The prime minister was addressing an action he took a day earlier, on Valentine's Day. No, not his marriage proposal to his partner, Jodie Haydon (she said yes). He was explaining his support for a parliament­ary motion that passed overwhelmi­ngly, calling for the release of an Australian citizen, imprisoned WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange. Albanese's support builds on a growing demand from Australian­s across the political spectrum that the United Kingdom not extradite Assange to the United States.

Assange's counsel, Jennifer Robinson, said: “The appeal next week could be Julian's final appeal against U.S. extraditio­n. If permission to appeal is denied, there are no further appeals available to us in the U.K.” If extradited, Assange faces up to 175 years in prison in the United States. Said Prime Minister Albanese, “Enough is enough.”

Prior to his imprisonme­nt in Belmarsh, Julian Assange spent seven years cramped inside Ecuador's small London embassy, where he'd been granted political asylum.

Assange founded WikiLeaks, a website that publishes leaked material while protecting the identity of the whistleblo­wers. Launched in 2006, it wasn't until 2010 that the U.S. government forcefully and publicly targeted WikiLeaks and Assange, after WikiLeaks made several massive disclosure­s of leaked documents related to the U.S. invasions and occupation­s of Iraq and Afghanista­n.

On Monday, April 5, 2010, Julian Assange released a shocking video titled “Collateral Murder” that was shot in 2007 from a U.S. military Apache helicopter flying over Baghdad, Iraq. The video shows in grainy black and white detail the gunship's attack on a group of people on the ground. Twelve civilians, including two Reuters news employees, were mowed down by automatic fire from the helicopter. The voices of the crew were recorded as they sought permission to “engage” with their targets, and as they laughed and cursed through the slaughter. It was a chilling video, documentin­g a war crime.

The video's release was followed by the publicatio­n on WikiLeaks.org of hundreds of thousands of digital records from the U.S. military, dubbed the Iraq War Logs and the Afghan War Diary. These documents provided further proof that the U.S. was committing war crimes. Then Vice President Joe Biden called him a “hightech terrorist.”

The U.S. Justice Department convened a secret grand jury that issued a sealed indictment against Assange. Existence of the indictment was revealed on WikiLeaks in 2012. U.S. and U.K. persecutio­n of Assange since then has been continuous and severe. In 2017, as revealed in 2021 by journalist Michael Isikoff and colleagues, the CIA hatched plans to either kidnap Assange from the Ecuadorian embassy or even to assassinat­e him.

Andrew Wilkie, an independen­t member of the Australian Parliament from Tasmania, introduced the resolution in support of Assange this week, saying, “This House notes that on 20 and 21 February 2024, the High Court of Justice in the United Kingdom will hold a hearing into whether Walkley Award-winning journalist Julian Assange can appeal against his extraditio­n to the United States of America … both the Australian government and opposition have publicly stated that this matter has gone on for too long, and underlines the importance of the U.K. and U.S.A. bringing the matter to a close so that Mr. Assange can return home to his family in Australia.”

The Australian government is not alone in calling for Assange's release. In November 2022, five major newspapers that collaborat­ed with WikiLeaks — The New York Times, The Guardian, Le Monde, El Pais and Der Spiegel — released a joint letter calling for an end to the prosecutio­n. “Obtaining and disclosing sensitive informatio­n when necessary in the public interest is a core part of the daily work of journalist­s. If that work is criminaliz­ed, our public discourse and our democracie­s are made significan­tly weaker,” the letter read.

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