Police pay $20m to guard Julian Assange

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. Source: AAP

The cost of policing the embassy in London where Julian Assange has been holed up since mid-2012 has now topped $A20 million.

A London radio station has crunched the numbers after a freedom of information request revealed the Metropolitan Police had spent $A18 million guarding the Ecuadorean diplomatic mission to the end of October 2014.

That's $A21,000 per day and, given Assange has been inside the embassy for 960 days since June 19, 2012, the total figure to date is now just over $20 million.

A frustrated British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg on Thursday insisted the Australian should leave the embassy and "face justice".

The WikiLeaks founder is avoiding extradition to Sweden over allegations of sexual assault.

Assange fears if he's extradited he could subsequently be sent to the United States and charged over the website's release of classified documents.

Britain's Foreign and Commonwealth Office says the government remains committed to reaching a "diplomatic solution".

"We are clear that our laws must be followed and Mr Assange should be extradited to Sweden," a spokeswoman said in a statement on Thursday.

"As ever we look to Ecuador to help bring this difficult, and costly, situation to an end."

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Police pay $20m to guard Julian Assange

Julian Assange security bill at more than $20 million

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SECURITY DETAIL: Metropolitan Police officers stand guard outside the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where fugitive Julian Assange is holed up. The security has reportedly cost NZ$20million.

The cost of policing the embassy in London where Julian Assange has been holed up since mid-2012 has now topped 10 million ($NZ20.7 million).

A London radio station has crunched the numbers after a freedom of information request revealed the Metropolitan Police had spent 9 million ($NZ18.6 million) guarding the diplomatic mission to the end of October 2014.

That's 10,500 ($NZ21,750) per day and, given Assange has been inside the embassy for 960 days since June 19, 2012, the total figure to date is now just over 10 million.

A frustrated British Deputy Prime Minister Nick Clegg on Thursday (Friday NZT) insisted the Australian should leave the embassy and "face justice".

The WikiLeaks founder is avoiding extradition to Sweden over allegations of sexual assault.

Assange fears if he's extradited he could subsequently be sent to the United States and charged over the website's release of classified documents.

Britain's Foreign and Commonwealth Office says the government remains committed to reaching a "diplomatic solution".

"We are clear that our laws must be followed and Mr Assange should be extradited to Sweden," a spokeswoman said in a statement on Thursday.

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Julian Assange security bill at more than $20 million

Fury as cost of policing Julian Assange’s Ecuador Embassy hideaway soars past £10MILLION

PA/GETTY

It is now believed the cost of policing the Embassy has now soared past 10million, it emerged today.

Metropolitan Police officers have been standing outside the building in Knightsbridge, west London, since Mr Assange took shelter there in June 2012.

Police are forced to patrol the outside of the Embassy in case he steps foot on British soil, in which case he would be arrested.

Scotland Yard spent 9million on policing the building to the end of October, according to figures released in a Freedom of Information request from LBC Radio.

Mr Assange has been holed up in the Embassy for a further 96 days since these figures were released - meaning that the actual total amount spent by the force today has passed the 10million mark, or roughly 10,500 a day.

Mr Assange, 43, is seeking to avoid extradition to Sweden where he is wanted for questioning over claims he assaulted two women in Stockholm - which he denies.

Nearly six months ago he said he would be leaving the Embassy soon as his health was deteriorating, but he has yet to leave and has now been there for 959 days.

PA

A Foreign Office spokesman said today: "We remain as committed as ever to reaching a diplomatic solution to this situation. We are clear that our laws must be followed and Mr Assange should be extradited to Sweden.

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Fury as cost of policing Julian Assange's Ecuador Embassy hideaway soars past £10MILLION

Britain has spent £10 million on policing Julian Assange

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange gives a statement at a press conference inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London 18 August 2014.

Image: EPA John Stillwell

By Blathnaid HealyUK2015-02-05 19:29:25 UTC

LONDON Monitoring the Ecuadorian embassy in London where Julian Assange is staying has been a costly exercise for the British taxpayer.

To date, 10 million ($15 million) has been spent to ensure the WikiLeaks founder doesn't put a foot on British soil.

In a request filed under the Freedom of Information Act, LBC Radio found that it costs 10,500 ($16,000) to guard the embassy around the clock each day.

So far, Assange has spent 959 days in the embassy after Ecuador granted him political asylum in 2012, preventing the WikiLeaks founder from being extradited to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over allegations of sexual misconduct.

During that time, Assange has been waiting for a diplomatic solution to the standoff. In July, a court in Sweden upheld an arrest warrant against him, leaving Assange in legal limbo with no solution in sight.

In August, Assange said he would leave the embassy "soon," but didn't specify when or what terms might be involved.

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Britain has spent £10 million on policing Julian Assange

Julian Assange’s asylum has cost UK taxpayers over £10m

Policing costs for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange passes 10m as asylum at Ecuadorian embassy continues(Reuters)

The cost to the UK taxpayer for policing WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange during his asylum stay at the Ecuadorian embassy has passed 10m, figures show.

Assange has sought asylum in the embassy since June 2012 in order to avoid extradition to Sweden, where he has been accused of sexually assaulting two women in Stockholm in 2010.

The allegations are denied by Assange and it is feared that he will be extradited to the US from Sweden, where he faces charges of leaking secret government documents.

UK Minister of State Hugo Swire said in a statement to Parliament that the government would welcome a visit from the Swedish prosecution if they sought to question Assange in the Ecuadorian embassy.

"If (the prosecution) wishes to travel here to question Mr Assange in the embassy in London we would do absolutely everything in order to facilitate that," Swire said. "Indeed, we would actively welcome it."

Cost estimates have been taken from a statement by the Metropolitan Police in January 2015, in which it was revealed that the government was spending around 10,500 per day by maintaining a police presence at the embassy.

A minimum of three police officers are stationed outside the embassy 24-hours-a-day under orders to arrest Assange if he attempts to leave. Ecuador has stated that Assange can stay indefinitely.

A website dedicated to tracking the costs of Assange's asylum stay estimates that the money spent by the UK taxpayer on police at the embassy is the equivalent of around 40,000 hospital beds for one night.

"Why should this continue to be the UK's problem?" the website states. "Sweden won't come to London to question Assange, and Ecuador has given Assange the right to stay in their embassy indefinitely.

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Julian Assange's asylum has cost UK taxpayers over £10m

Citizen Dave: A college degree does not guarantee presidential timber

There are lots of reasons Gov. Scott Walker should not be president, but one of them is not the fact that he didn't complete his college degree at Marquette.

This is a topic that comes up regularly with my neighbors and others in my circle of friends and acquaintances. They're incredulous that a guy who didn't get his higher education ticket stamped would have ever been seriously considered for governor much less president. While I guess I shouldn't be surprised at that attitude in a college town like ours, it's in those moments that I get a taste for why the rest of the state thinks we're a bunch of out-of-touch elitists.

For evidence that college is overrated as a prerequisite for leadership I offer George W. Bush. Bush has a bachelor's degree from Yale and an MBA from Harvard. His record speaks for itself. I could rest my case right there, I suppose.

But let's look at the other side of the equation: those without college degrees who went on to be successful in all kinds of fields. They include Microsoft founder Paul Allen, film director Woody Allen, singer Joan Armatrading and Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. And that's just a small sampling from those with names starting with "A".

A man who should have been president but never finished college was the late Illinois Sen. Paul Simon. Simon, who ran for president in 1988, was highly regarded for his thoughtfulness on the issues. He was the author of some 20 books. There was a joke going around at the time that Simon had written more books than the outgoing president in 1988, college graduate Ronald Reagan, had ever read.

Look, I understand that for people with average intellects, like myself, college pays off in higher earnings over a lifetime, and, we hope, it might make us better citizens for having a broader education. For those reasons alone Walker's $300 million cut to the UW System's budget is shortsighted. If college accomplishes anything, it should instill a lifelong habit of learning, but I know lots of people who have that intellectual curiosity who didn't finish college and lots who don't who did.

Aside from the fact that the college rap on Walker is just wrong, the reason that Democrats have to shed this education-elitist attitude is that it's killing them at the polls. Fully 68% of Americans don't have a college degree and are probably too old to seriously consider getting one. (And in nations like Germany, where far fewer people go to college, but where technical school training is stronger, the middle class does better.)

Those non-college grads include my mother, who was plenty smart enough to get into college but simply couldn't afford to go. To the extent I'm any kind of a halfway decent writer I get that from her. I only wish I had her penmanship.

So, what does it say to my mom and to millions of other Americans who couldn't afford to go to college or whose life experiences kept them away or who simply found success without it, that we think you can't be president if you didn't put in your four years?

Democrats got crushed in 2014 in large part because they lost by a big margin among middle-class whites without a college education -- the very people who are being so badly hurt by Republican policies and who could be helped by Democratic initiatives. They voted against the Democrats because of this yawning cultural divide, which is only fed by the idea that those not privileged to have collected a diploma need not apply to lead the nation.

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Citizen Dave: A college degree does not guarantee presidential timber

A Glimmer Of Hope for Julian Assange

Authorities in Sweden, which is seeking the Australian journalists extradition to face allegations of sexual assault, admitted there is a possibility that measures could be taken to jumpstart the stalled legal proceedings against Assange.

GENEVA - There is a window of hope, thanks to a U.N. human rights body, for a solution to the diplomatic asylum of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, holed up in the embassy of Ecuador in London for the past two and a half years.

Authorities in Sweden, which is seeking the Australian journalists extradition to face allegations of sexual assault, admitted there is a possibility that measures could be taken to jumpstart the stalled legal proceedings against Assange.

The head of Assanges legal defence team, former Spanish judge Baltasar Garzn, told IPS that in relation to this case we have expressed satisfaction that the Swedish state has accepted the proposals of several countries.

The prominent Spanish lawyer and international jurist was referring to proposals set forth by Argentina, Cuba, Ecuador, Slovakia and Uruguay.

The final report by the U.N. Human Rights Councils Universal Periodic Review (UPR), adopted Thursday Jan. 28 in Geneva, Switzerland, contains indications that a possible understanding among the different countries concerned might be on the horizon.

The UPR is a mechanism of the Geneva-based Human Rights Council to examine the human rights performance of all U.N. member states.

The situation of Assange, a journalist, computer programmer and activist born in Australia in 1971, was introduced in Swedens UPR by Ecuador, the country that granted him diplomatic asylum in its embassy in London, and by several European and Latin American nations.

The head of the Swedish delegation to the UPR, Annika Sder, state secretary for political affairs at Swedens foreign ministry, told IPS that This is a very complex matter in which the government can only do a few things.

Sder said that in Sweden, Assange is suspected of crimes, rape, sexual molestation in accordance with Swedish law. And thats why the prosecutor in Sweden wants to conduct the primary investigation.

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A Glimmer Of Hope for Julian Assange

Google hands data to US Govt in WikiLeaks espionage case

Google hands data to US Government in WikiLeaks espionage case

Monday January 26, 08:00 AEST

Today, WikiLeaks' lawyers have written to Google and the US Department of Justice concerning a serious violation of the privacy and journalistic rights of WikiLeaks' staff. Investigations editor Sarah Harrison, Section Editor Joseph Farrell and senior journalist and spokesperson Kristinn Hrafnsson have received notice that Google had handed over all their emails and metadata to the United States government on the back of alleged 'conspiracy' and 'espionage' warrants carrying up to 45 years in prison.

Importantly, the warrants reveal for the first time a clear list of the alleged offences the US government is trying to apply in its attempts to build a prosecution against Julian Assange and other WikiLeaks staff. The offences add up to a total of 45 years of imprisonment.

The US government is claiming universal jurisdiction to apply the Espionage Act, general Conspiracy statute and the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act to journalists and publishers a horrifying precedent for press freedoms around the world. Once an offence is alleged in relation to a journalist or their source, the whole media organisation, by the nature of its work flow, can be targeted as alleged 'conspiracy'. Julian Assange, WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief said: 'WikiLeaks has out endured everything the Obama administration has thrown at us and we will out endure these latest "offences" too.'

The alleged offences are:

Espionage: 18 U.S.C. 793(d) - imprisonment up to 10 years

Conspiracy to commit espionage: 18 U.S.C. 793(g) - imprisonment up to 10 years

The theft or conversion of property belonging to the United States government: 18 U.S.C. 641 - imprisonment up to 10 years

Violation of the Computer Fraud and Abuse Act: 18 U.S.C. 1030 - imprisonment up to 10 years

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Google hands data to US Govt in WikiLeaks espionage case

Google provided WikiLeaks journalists’ metadata in Julian …

Sarah Harrison, assistant to Julian Assange, thanks supporters outside Ecuador's embassy in London in 2012. She is among the journalists whose details were provided to authorities. Photo: Supplied

EXCLUSIVE

Google secretly gave the emails of WikiLeaks journalists to the US government in response to an espionage investigation targeting Julian Assange, according to documents disclosed by the internet giant.

Three journalists who have worked for WikiLeaks since 2010 Sarah Harrison, Joseph Farrell and Kristinn Hrafnsson have been informed by Google that all their Gmail account content, metadata, subscriber information, and other content were provided to US federal law enforcement in response to search warrants issued in March 2012.

Julian Assange (right) and Ecuadorian Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino address media at the Ecuadorian embassy in 2014. Photo: AP

The Google accounts of WikiLeaks staff were accessed as part of an investigation of alleged conspiracy to commit espionage. US laws referenced in the warrants include those relating to espionage, conspiracy, theft or conversion of US government property and computer fraud and abuse.

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The warrants were issued by US District Court magistrate John F. Anderson, the same magistrate in the eastern district of Virginia who, in June 2013, issued an arrest warrant for former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden.

Google notified the three WikiLeaks staff of the warrants on December 23, 2014. It hadhanded all the data to the US government by April 5, 2012, 32 months earlier.

The US Justice Department opened an investigation of WikiLeaks in 2010 after the website began publishing secret US diplomatic and military reports leaked by US soldier Chelsea Manning, then known as Bradley Manning. The thousands of leaked documents covered US military operations in Afghanistan and Iraq and the conduct of US diplomacy across the globe, generating massive political embarrassment.

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