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Julian Assange - WikiLeaks


Swedish prosecutor drops case against Julian Assange - WikiLeaks




Sweden has dropped its case against Julian Assange and will revoke its arrest warrant, WikiLeaks has announced.


The decision was made by Sweden’s director of public prosecution, who confirmed that she decided to discontinue the investigation against the WikiLeaks co-founder.
“Chief Prosecutor Marianne Ny has today decided to discontinue the preliminary investigation regarding suspected rape concerning Julian Assange,” the prosecutor's office said in a statement, as quoted by Reuters.
The decision to drop the investigation into an allegation of rape against Assange marks an end to a seven-year stand-off.
Assange has lived in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London since 2012, in order to avoid extradition to Sweden over the allegation, which he denies.
The decision comes after Assange’s Swedish lawyer filed a motion which demanded that the arrest warrant be lifted, after US Attorney General Jeff Sessions said in April that arresting the WikiLeaks co-founder would be a “priority.”
US authorities have been investigating Assange and WikiLeaks since at least 2010, when the site posted thousands of cables stolen by former US Army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning.
The publication of classified US military and diplomatic documents represents one of the biggest information leaks in American history.
Just days ago, Ecuador voiced concern over the “serious lack of progress” by Sweden in dealing with Assange, citing a “serious failure” by the prosecution to complete the inquiry into the alleged sexual assault.
One of Assange’s lawyers said earlier on Friday that closing the investigation or lifting the European arrest warrant would not necessarily mean he could easily leave for Ecuador, which has granted him asylum.
“The first thing one likely needs to do is seek guarantees from the British authorities that he won’t be seized in some other way,” Melinda Taylor told TT news agency.

UK refuses to confirm or deny whether it has already received a US extradition warrant for Julian Assange. Focus now moves to UK.
Britain has so far refused to confirm or deny whether it has received a US extradition warrant for Assange, according to WikiLeaks.

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font       redaction                https://www.rt.com/news/388904-assange-rape-investigation-drop/

Julian Assange calls on UK and Sweden to set him free

The controversial WikiLeaks founder claims the two countries are deliberately going against a UN order to free him and compensate him.



WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange speaks from the balcony of the Ecuadorian embassy in London on Feb. 5, 2016.Carl Court, Getty Images


WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in a tweet on Monday called upon the UK and Sweden to restore his freedom.
Assange has been living in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for over four years, having been offered asylum by the country amid legal tussles with the US, Sweden and the UK. If Assange were to leave the embassy, he would be immediately arrested by British police who would then extradite him to Sweden, where he is under investigation by prosecutors.
It has been one year since the UN told the UK and Sweden that they were acting unlawfully by depriving Assange of his liberty and must immediately free him and compensate him. The UK appealed the decision, but its request for the decision to be reconsidered was rejected by the UN in November.
"I call on the UK and Sweden to do the right thing and restore my liberty," said Assange in a statement tweeted by WikiLeaks. "These two states signed treaties to recognize the UN and its human rights mechanisms."
Assange's saga is a complicated one. Sweden issued an arrest warrant for the Australian native six years ago on several charges, including an allegation of rape. Assange took shelter in the Ecuadorian embassy in London because he feared officials would extradite him to the US to face prosecution over leaked government and military documents.
Last month, Assange said he would be willing to travel to the US to face a federal investigation tied to WikiLeaks' publication of classified government documents, though he set some conditions: He wants the Justice Department either to drop its charges against him or to unseal any extradition orders or charges it's keeping confidential. That came after President Barack Obama commuted the prison sentence of Chelsea Manning, the former US soldier who supplied WikiLeaks with thousands of classified documents.
Spokespeople from the UK and Swedish governments didn't immediately respond to a request for comment.
font         redaction  https://www.cnet.com/news/julian-assange-calls-on-uk-and-sweden-to-set-him-free/


Julian Assange says Obama was a 'wolf in sheepskin' but Trump is a 'wolf in wolf's skin'





ASSANGE OPENS UP ABOUT TRUMP, CLINTON, WIKILEAKS' FUTURE AND THE EMBASSY CAT




As the world braces itself for the third week of Donald Trump's presidency, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange reportedly opened up about his views on the course of the 2016 US presidential election, the role WikiLeaks played in Hillary Clinton's unexpected defeat and the Trump administration.
Dressed in a blue sweater, wrinkled green trousers and red sneakers, Assange spoke to Santiago O'Donnell from the Buenos Aires-based newspaper Página/12, from the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he has lived under asylum since 2012. Assange spoke on a range of topics, including the much adored embassy cat as well as WikiLeaks' future.



Commenting on Trump's public image, Assange in his latest interview said: "The fact that he is a misogynist and a racist we have all seen. He has exhibited such behaviour. How much of that was sincere and how much was it to ingratiate itself with the white Republican base I do not know."
Assange likened Barack Obama and his administration to a "wolf in sheepskin", adding that Trump and his administration, in comparison, are a "wolf in wolf's skin". He said: "It is easier to deal with a wolf that is not disguised."
When asked about Trump's immigration ban and plans to build a wall at the Mexican border, Assange responded: "The wall already exists. Where there is no constructed wall, there are natural boundaries, such as deserts or rivers."
Assange said Trump's wall has a "symbolic meaning" but is not practical. "But if Latin America perceives that the United States is rejecting the region, the consequence will be that Latin America 

will reject the United States," he added.
WikiLeaks' role in the US election
Assange has previously reiterated that WikiLeaks' publication of Clinton documents was not intended to favour Trump and that its source of the damning materials was not Russia. It is a stance that the whistleblower continues to maintain, despite numerous allegations.
He said: "We did not publish it to favour Trump. We publish it for our own reasons. Look at it from WikiLeaks' perspective. If we have access to important information to understand how the Clinton network operates in Washington and within the Democratic Party, it is because we have assured our sources that we will publish that information in the most appropriate manner and in the context in which it may have the greatest impact. We thought we were sacrificing. I did not think the establishment was going to let Trump win."
Assange also claimed that WikiLeaks would continue publishing material pertaining to the US government, regardless of which administration remains in power. He pointed out that the transparency platform had previously also published documents from George W Bush's Republican government and will "continue" with its publication with the Trump administration as well.
Assange indicated that WikiLeaks' publication during the election may have disrupted Clinton's "intricate network" in Washington.
He said: "The destruction or marginalisation of the Clinton network in Washington can be seen in the sharp fall of large donations to the Clinton Foundation and the closure of the Clinton Global Initiative. It was a network of influential traffic in which Hillary Clinton was the one that trafficked while Bill Clinton ruled in the White House."






Julian Assange
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange prepares to speak from the balcony of the Ecuadorian embassy where he continues to seek asylum following an extradition request from Sweden in 2012Carl Court/Getty Images


When asked about his offer to give himself up to the US government, in exchange for Chelsea Manning's freedom, Assange indicated that he stood by his previous statement. He claimed that he would deliver on his offer if the US government respected his rights.
He claimed that he wanted to "start a dialogue with the Department of Justice" and that they would "continue negotiations" once Jeff Sessions takes office. He added it was now the US government's turn to make a move.
"We believe that they should close the case against WikiLeaks, which threatens the freedom of the press. As it is being prepared, the WikiLeaks trial would be in Alexandria, Virgina, where there is the largest concentration of CIA contractors nationwide and these would form the potential jurors. There are still things to talk about," he said.








Assange's embassy cat
The much adored embassy cat, which even has its own Twitter account with over 27,000 followers, has been Assange's companion for over a year now.
Speaking about the cat's influence on his life, Assange said: "He arrived newborn a year ago and is already an adult cat. The cat has become a superstar. It is one of the most famous cats in the world. He looks out the window and the paparazzi take pictures of him. We thought it would be a good addition to the embassy and that the women who work here would like to have a kitten, but ended up wanting it too much and set up a kind of competition to take care of it."
Despite the widespread popularity both Assange and WikiLeaks gained during the US election, the future of both remains uncertain. He recently renewed his plea to the UK and Swedish governments to "restore" his freedom.
"I call on the UK and Sweden to do the right thing and restore my liberty," he said, the BBC reported. "These two states signed treaties to recognise the UN and its human rights mechanisms."
"This refusal to respect the umpire's decision comes at a terrible cost," he added. "Other states can now illegally detain Swedish and UK citizens with effective impunity and the UN human rights system more broadly is imperilled."
font                 images                 google
font                 redaction               http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/julian-assange-says-obama-was-wolf-sheepskin-trump-wolf-wolfs-skin-1604966

tags-  julian assange- wikileaks - freedom-

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