WikiLeaks' Assange seeks asylum at Ecuador embassy


WikiLeaks' Assange seeks asylum at Ecuador embassy
By Alexandra Valencia and Avril Ormsby  QUITO/LONDON | Tue Jun 19, 2012

(Reuters) - WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange has taken refuge in Ecuador's embassy in London and asked for asylum, officials said on Tuesday, in a last-ditch bid to avoid extradition to Sweden over sex crime accusations.

Ecuadorean Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino said his country would weigh the request from the 40-year-old hacker, famous for leaking hundreds of thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables.

The appeal for protection was the latest twist in Assange's 18-month fight against being sent to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning about allegations of rape and sexual assault made by two female former WikiLeaks volunteers.

The situation threatens to inflame tensions between the government of Rafael Correa, Ecuador's leftist and ardently anti-Washington president, and U.S. authorities, who accuse Assange of damaging its foreign relations with his leaks.

The Andean nation in 2010 invited Assange to seek residency there but quickly backed off the idea, accusing him of breaking U.S. laws.

Since his detention, Assange has mostly been living under strict bail conditions at the country mansion of a wealthy supporter in eastern England. His associates say that amounts to 540 days under house arrest without charge. Breach of bail conditions is potentially a criminal offence.

"While the department assesses Mr. Assange's application, Mr. Assange will remain at the embassy, under the protection of the Ecuadorean Government," the embassy said on its website.

Assange .. complaining that his home country of Australia had abandoned him and refused to defend him, according to a statement from Ecuador's Foreign Ministry.

According to Patino, Assange fears extradition "to a country where espionage and treason are punished with the death penalty". He appeared to be referring to the United States, because Sweden does not have the death penalty. Neither Sweden nor the United States has charged him with treason or spying.

The lawyer for the two female former WikiLeaks volunteers who made the complaints against Assange said he was not surprised by Assange's latest move but expected Ecuador to reject the asylum request.

Britain's Supreme Court last week said Assange could be extradited to Sweden in about two weeks' time, rejecting his argument that a European arrest warrant issued by Swedish prosecutors for his extradition was invalid.

The only recourse left to him through the courts is an appeal to the European Court of Human Rights.

Assange, who has not been charged with any offence in Sweden and denies any wrongdoing, has argued that the case is politically motivated because the release of documents on his website has angered the United States.
In 2010, WikiLeaks began releasing secret video footage and thousands of U.S. diplomatic cables, many of them about Iraq and Afghanistan, in the largest leak of classified documents in U.S. history.

The silver-haired Assange spent nine days in jail in Britain before being released on bail on December 16, 2010, after his supporters raised a surety of 200,000 pounds.

Anti-censorship campaigners who backed Assange at one stage included celebrities such as journalist John Pilger, film director Ken Loach and socialite Jemima Khan.

As part of his bail conditions, he had to abide by a curfew, report to police daily, and wear an electronic tag.

Wikileaks has faded from the headlines due to a dearth of scoops and a blockade by credit card companies that has made donations to the site almost impossible.

(Additional reporting by Patrick Lannin in Stockholm and Mark Hosenball in Washington DC; Writing by Brian Ellsworth and Daniel Wallis; Editing by Andrew Heavens)



Wikileaks Moves to Farce: Will Assange Live Out His Days in an Ecuadorian Embassy?
by Peter Spiro   June 20, 2012

(DO – even assuming asylum is granted, the host government should agree to the passage of asylum-seeker out of the country)

Story here, and a lot of play on this morning’s BBC Newshour.  This is the second time in recent months that so-called “diplomatic asylum” has crept into the headlines, last with respect to Chen Guangcheng in China in May. See this earlier post, which links to an excellent Foreign Policy background piece on diplomatic asylum.

Unlike the Chen case, I doubt very much that the UK will agree to Assange’s safe passage out of the country on the way to Ecuador even if Ecuador grants him asylum (which itself seems like a stretch, insofar as the Swedish sex case against Assange hardly qualifies as political persecution, at least not as customarily conceived – but see the Embassy of Ecuador’s statement here).  So the best Assange can hope for is a long stay in non-country house quarters.

Speaking of Ecuador, is it trying to revive its imperial ambitions, in some postmodern way? See this engaging piece by Frank Jacobs, the master of cartographic stories, coincidentally out today in the NY Times (calling Duncan Hollis: interesting treaty tales therein)



Statement on Julian Assange
June 19, 2012

The decision to consider Mr Assange’s application for protective asylum should in no way be interpreted as the Government of Ecuador interfering in the judicial processes of either the United Kingdom or Sweden


Assange's asylum bid a possible boon for Ecuador's Correa
By Alexander Martinez | AFP – Wed, Jun 20, 2012

Ecuador may well grant WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's request for political asylum, analysts say, in a bid by President Rafael Correa to needle the United States and boost his image at home.

Analysts here say that coming to Assange's rescue might help Correa offset the storm of international criticism over his campaign against the opposition media in Ecuador.

The court sentenced three top executives of the Quito daily El Universal, and a former editorial page editor to three years in prison. Correa was awarded $40 million in damages.

Rights groups -- including Human Rights Watch, Reporters Without Borders and the Inter American Press Association -- called the ruling a blow to freedom of speech in Ecuador.

In February, Correa pardoned the executives and voided the monetary damages, but the criticism has barely subsided: according to the Ecuadoran NGO Fundamedios, the government's persecution of the opposition press continues.





Assange seeks asylum in Ecuador
By Elias Groll   Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Assange has been in Britain for the better part of the past year while fighting the extradition order to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning in connection with alleged sex crimes

Sweden, of course, does not have the death penalty on the books, but Assange has long maintained that the extradition order is part of a conspiracy by the American government to have him extradited to the United States in order to face espionage charges, a crime for which he could face the death penalty. Swedish prosecutors have not charged Assange with a crime.

The choice to seek asylum in Ecuador may seem surprising, but Ecuador's president, Rafael Correa, has closely aligned himself with Hugo Chavez's Venezuela and Evo Morales' Bolivia, and like his South American compatriots, Correa preaches a political doctrine willing to crack down on press freedoms and political rights to preserve his particular brand of socialism.  Additionally, Correa and Assange have something of a personal history-Assange interviewed Correa this year on his RT talk show, and Ecuador offered the Australian hacker-cum-provocateur residence in 2010.

Complicating matters, Ecuador has signed extradition treaties with both the United States and the European Union, but given Assange's decision to pursue asylum at the Ecuadorian embassy in London, it would appear unlikely that Ecuador will enforce those agreements



Julian Assange's right to asylum
Glenn Greenwald   Wednesday 20 June 2012

Given the travesty that is American justice, WikiLeaks' founder is entitled to seek asylum and well-advised to fear extradition

If one asks current or former WikiLeaks associates what their greatest fear is, almost none cites prosecution by their own country. Most trust their own nation's justice system to recognize that they have committed no crime. The primary fear is being turned over to the US.  That is the crucial context for understanding Julian Assange's 16-month fight to avoid extradition to Sweden, a fight that led him to seek asylum, Tuesday, in the London Embassy of Ecuador.

The evidence that the US seeks to prosecute and extradite Assange is substantial.  There is no question that the Obama justice department has convened an active grand jury to investigate whether WikiLeaks violated the draconian Espionage Act of 1917. Key senators from President Obama's party, including Senate intelligence committee chairwoman Dianne Feinstein, have publicly called for his prosecution under that statute. A leaked email from the security firm Stratfor – hardly a dispositive source, but still probative – indicated that a sealed indictment has already been obtained against him. Prominent American figures in both parties have demanded Assange's lifelong imprisonment, called him a terrorist, and even advocated his assassination.

For several reasons, Assange has long feared that the US would be able to coerce Sweden into handing him over far more easily than if he were in Britain. For one, smaller countries such as Sweden are generally more susceptible to American pressure and bullying. 

For another, that country has a disturbing history of lawlessly handing over suspects to the US. A 2006 UN ruling found Sweden in violation of the global ban on torture for helping the CIA render two suspected terrorists to Egypt, where they were brutally tortured (both individuals, asylum-seekers in Sweden, were ultimately found to be innocent of any connection to terrorism and received a monetary settlement from the Swedish government). 

Perhaps most disturbingly of all, Swedish law permits extreme levels of secrecy in judicial proceedings and oppressive pre-trial conditions, enabling any Swedish-US transactions concerning Assange to be conducted beyond public scrutiny. Ironically, even the US State Department condemned Sweden's "restrictive conditions for prisoners held in pretrial custody", including severe restrictions on their communications with the outside world.

Assange's fear of ending up in the clutches of the US is plainly rational and well-grounded. One need only look at the treatment over the last decade of foreign nationals accused of harming American national security to know that's true; such individuals are still routinely imprisoned for lengthy periods without any charges or due process. Or consider the treatment of Bradley Manning, accused of leaking to WikiLeaks: a formal UN investigation found that his pre-trial conditions of severe solitary confinement were "cruel, inhuman and degrading", and he now faces capital charges of aiding al-Qaida. The Obama administration's unprecedented obsession with persecuting whistleblowers and preventing transparency – what even generally supportive, liberal magazines call "Obama's war on whistleblowers" – makes those concerns all the more valid.

No responsible person should have formed a judgment one way or the other as to whether Assange is guilty of anything in Sweden.  He has not even been charged, let alone tried or convicted, of sexual assault, and he is entitled to a presumption of innocence. The accusations made against him are serious ones, and deserve to be taken seriously and accorded a fair and legal resolution.

But the WikiLeaks founder, like everyone else, is fully entitled to invoke all of his legal rights, and it's profoundly reckless and irresponsible to suggest, as some have, that he has done anything wrong by doing so. Seeking asylum on the grounds of claimed human rights violations is a longstanding and well-recognized right in international law. It is unseemly, at best, to insist that he forego his rights in order to herd him as quickly as possible to Sweden.  

Assange is not a fugitive and has not fled.  Everyone knows where he is.  If Ecuador rejects his asylum request, he will be right back in the hands of British authorities, who will presumably extradite him to Sweden without delay. At every step of the process, he has adhered to, rather than violated, the rule of law. His asylum request of yesterday is no exception.

Julian Assange has sparked intense personal animosity, especially in media circles – a revealing irony, given that he has helped to bring about more transparency and generated more newsworthy scoops than all media outlets combined over the last several years. That animosity often leads media commentators to toss aside their professed beliefs and principles out of an eagerness to see him shamed or punished.

But ego clashes and media personality conflicts are pitifully trivial when weighed against what is at stake in this case: both for Assange personally and for the greater cause of transparency. If he's guilty of any crimes in Sweden, he should be held to account. But until then, he has every right to invoke the legal protections available to everyone else. Even more so, as a foreign national accused of harming US national security, he has every reason to want to avoid ending up in the travesty known as the American judicial system