Fake reports led to demise of Stand News – Chinadaily USA

Photo taken on July 14, 2020 shows the Golden Bauhinia Square in Hong Kong. [Photo/Xinhua]

Some Western governments, news outlets and NGOs have been lining up to denounce police in the Hong Kong Special Administrative Region for the arrests of seven senior staff members of Stand News, though it's likely many of those critics have never even heard of the media outlet or read a word on its now defunct website.

The outlet itself announced its closure after the police froze HK$61 million ($7.8 million) worth of its assets. Among those arrested, Margaret Ng Ngoi-yee and Denise Ho Wan-sze have been granted bail.

Police have listed stories published by the group that amply show it was less a news group than a subversive organization.

According to the police, Stand News has been "inciting hatred against the Hong Kong government" in violation of a sedition law.

Some United States officials and news media have criticized the use of the colonial era law, happily oblivious of the fact that Washington has used an espionage law from World War I to charge Australian-born whistleblower and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange and seek his extradition from Britain. Assange's real offense was to have exposed war crimes and corruption committed by the US government.

Of the many offending articles published by Stand News, the last straw was a fake news report criticizing a new "smart" detention center for asylum seekers, mostly from the Asian region. Stand News had been in the spotlight of the authorities for months. Sensing trouble, it had deleted all of its political commentary from its website in June.

In its final statement posted on its site, it claimed to be "safeguarding Hong Kong's core values of democracy, human rights, freedom, the rule of law and justice". If only that were true.

It was allegedly in the business of generating fake news and commentaries to incite people against their own society and government. Police are investigating possible ties to foreign agents. Fortunately, having revealed their true colors, some foreign governments led by Washington now have little leverage over Hong Kong and Beijing.

Not too long ago, the US would have had such leverage over Hong Kong, but, thankfully, not anymore, now that the National Security Law has effectively reduced the operations of foreign agents and neutralized their influence.

China has rightfully asserted its sovereignty against foreign operations under the guise of press freedom and free expression that were, in reality, blatant abuse against local authorities.

If Washington thinks it has any leverage left, it is sadly mistaken. Hong Kong's defense against foreign agents and local subversives is naturally portrayed as the crushing of press freedom. It's actually the crushing of fake news, encouraged and perhaps even funded by foreign sources.

After all, how did a small operation like Stand News manage to amass HK$61 million worth of assets, which naturally gives cause for a police probe?

Now Hong Kong is reasserting its real autonomy and control after being for far too long the playground of local subversives and foreign agents. These must be neutralized if the SAR is ever to enjoy peace, security, stability and prosperity.

The author is a veteran journalist who covered Hong Kong and Chinese mainland social and political issues.

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Fake reports led to demise of Stand News - Chinadaily USA

Another record year for press-freedom violations in the US – Columbia Journalism Review

Just six days into January 2021, journalists documenting the Capitol riots were assaulted and tens of thousands of dollars of media equipment damaged. In April, a journalist went on trial after her arrest while reporting from a Black Lives Matter protest the year before. By the time the year closed, one of the most venerated news institutions was under a publishing gag-order.

While we did not see the scope of national social-justice protests of 2020a year in which journalists were arrested or assaulted on average more than once a day2021 still outpaced the years before it for press-freedom violations. We systematically capture this data in the US Press Freedom Tracker, where Freedom of the Press Foundation, in partnership with the Committee to Protect Journalists and other press freedom groups, has documented aggressions against journalists in the United States since 2017.

Its tempting to compare 2021 against 2020when assaults and arrests of journalists hit an all-time highand conclude, because fewer journalists were arrested and fewer were hit with crowd-control munitions, that the state of press freedom in the US can be ignored. That conclusion would be wrong.

In fact, if you remove 2020 from the equation, the amount of press-freedom violations documented in 2021 outpaces the years before it across several categories:

In 2021, we documented 142 assaults of journalists. For the second consecutive year, the majority of those assaults came during protests: 95 percent in 2020 and 77 percent in 2021.

The year began with a protest that became a riot, as the US Capitol was stormed by a mob attempting to stop certification of election results. The Tracker documented at least 16 journalists assaulted in Washington, DC, while covering those events, many of whom were targeted.

For the second year in a row, the response to federal and local mandates around COVID-19 also factored into physical attacks of journalists. From anti-lockdown to anti-vaccine protests, coronavirus-related assaults increased from four (and much harassment) in 2020 to 14 in 2021.

In 2020, an unprecedented 142 arrests and detainments of journalists occurred, a nearly 1500-percent increase over the nine documented in 2019. In 2021, that number was 59, with nearly half arrested or detained in kettles, a tactic used to hem in large crowds, often before mass arrests.

The last arrests of the calendar year came on Christmas Day, when two Asheville Blade reporters were arrested while covering the eviction of a homeless encampment in North Carolina. Both face charges of trespassing, with hearings scheduled for March, and one of the reporters, Matilda Bliss, had her phone confiscated during her arrest.

Subpoenas, the Espionage Act and a Prior Restraint

Other Tracker categorieswe monitor nearly a dozendeserve closer looks as well.

For the first time in five years of documentation, the number of publicly-known subpoenas or other legal orders has decreased rather than increased. Of course, its not unusual to find out about subpoenas much after the fact: In 2021, we published details about just more than 50 subpoenas requesting reporting material or journalistic testimony. Fewer than half of those were for subpoenas issued in 2021.

For example, the US Department of Justice informed The New York Times on June 2, 2021, that the agency secretly obtained phone records of four of the newspapers reporters more than a year before, during the Trump administration in 2020.

That administration also attempted to obtain the four reporters email records in January 2021, an effort that continued for a time under the Biden administration. On June 5, the DOJ announced that it would no longer seize journalists records during leak investigations.

In December, freelance journalist Amy Harris sued the US House Select Committee to Investigate the January 6th Attack on the United States Capitol after it subpoenaed telecom operator Verizon for her phone records. Of the more than 20 subpoenas captured in 2021, Harris is among the eight still pending.

The Trump administration, together with the CIA, also reportedly plotted to kidnapand possibly even assassinateWikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has been held in a London jail since 2019, Yahoo! News reported in September. In October, more than two-dozen major civil liberties and human rights groups groups, including FPF, sent a letter to Attorney General Merrick Garland demanding that the DOJ drop its prosecution of Assange, underscoring that the criminal case against him poses a grave threat to press freedom both in the United States and abroad. To date, Bidens DOJ has continued the Trump administrations case against Assange, and in December, an appeals court in the United Kingdom said it would allow the US to proceed in extraditing him.

And while we only documented one prior restraint for all of 2021, even one is noteworthy. On November 11, a New York state court ordered the New York Times not to publish information around the group Project Veritas, the first prior restraint for the newspaper since the Pentagon Papers case 50 years ago. That prior restraint, which was struck down by the Supreme Court in a landmark decision in 1971, only lasted 15 days. As of this writing, this latest prior restraint remains in place, confounding press-freedom groups.

TOP IMAGE: Supporters of President Donald Trump break TV equipment outside the the US Capitol on Wednesday, January 6, 2021, in Washington. (AP Photo/Jose Luis Magana)

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Another record year for press-freedom violations in the US - Columbia Journalism Review

Julian Assange and press freedom

Sir, Freedom of expression is probably the most valuable of civil rights, but it necessarily comes with limitations. These include libel and defamation, medical confidentiality, national security and, famously, shouting fire in a crowded building, among many.

Ultimately what the exceptions illustrate is that free expression entails responsibility toward the rights and welfare of others.

In defending Julian Assanges reputation, Jim Roche (Letters, December 27th) argues that the former is being persecuted for exposing . . . facts that powerful political leaders dont want the public to know.

It is not possible to know that definitively, nor to characterise the actions of such people as anything other than wildly reckless.

Many of the files released by Mr Assange have contained more documents than they could possibly have read. The PlusD file from 2013 had 1.7 million intelligence reports in it. Other releases have contained millions of emails.

Divulging such volumes of unread information cannot be characterised as an ideology or strategy. It is simply reckless and risky behaviour. Yours, etc,

BRIAN OBRIEN,

Kinsale,

Co Cork.

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Julian Assange and press freedom

Opinion | Julian Assange, PEN America, and Ruling Class …

Nils Melzer, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture, is one of the very few establishment figures to denounce the judicial lynching of Julian Assange. Melzer's integrity and courage, for which he has been mercilessly attacked, stand in stark contrast to the widespread complicity of many human rights and press organizations, including PEN America, which has become a de facto subsidiary of the Democratic National Committee.

The legal precedent set in this atmosphere by the sentencing of Assange means that anyone who possesses classified material, or anyone who leaks it, will be guilty of a criminal offense. The sentencing of Assange will signal the end of all investigative inquiries into the inner workings of power.

Those in power, as Noam Chomsky points out, divide the world into "worthy" and "unworthy" victims. They weep crocodile tears over the plight of Uyghur Muslims persecuted in China while demonizing and slaughtering Muslims in the Middle East. They decry press censorship in hostile states and collude with the press censorship and algorithms emanating from Silicon Valley in the United States. It is an old and insidious game, one practiced not to promote human rights or press freedom but to envelop these courtiers to power in a sanctimonious and cloying self-righteousness. PEN America can't say the words "Belarus," "Myanmar" or the Chinese tennis star "Peng Shuai" fast enough, while all but ignoring the most egregious assault on press freedom in our lifetime. PEN America only stopped accepting funding from the Israeli government, which routinely censors and jails Palestinian journalists and writers in Israel and the occupied West Bank, for the literary group's annual World Voices festival in New York in 2017 when more than 250 writers, poets and publishers, many members of PEN, signed an appeal calling on the CEO of PEN America, Suzanne Nossel, to end PEN America's partnership with the Israeli government. The signatories included Wallace Shawn, Alice Walker, Eileen Myles, Louis Erdrich, Russel Banks, Cornel West, Junot Daz and Viet Thanh Nguyen. To stand up for Assange comes with a cost, as all moral imperatives do. And this is a cost the careerists and Democratic Party apparatchiks, who leverage corporate money and corporate backing to seize and deform these organizations into appendages of the ruling class, do not intend to pay.

PEN America is typical of the establishment hijacking of an organization that was founded and once run by writers, some of whom, including Susan Sontag and Norman Mailer, I knew. Nossel is a former corporate lawyer, listed as a "contributor" to The Federalist Society, who worked for McKinsey & Company and as Vice President of US Business Development for Bertelsmann. Nossel, who has had herself elevated to the position of the CEO of PEN America, also worked under Hillary Clinton in the State Department, including on the task force assigned to respond to the WikiLeaks revelations. I withdrew from a scheduled speaking event at the 2013 World Voices Festival in New York City and resigned from the organization, which that same year had given me its First Amendment Award, to protest Nossel's appointment. PEN Canada offered me membership which I accepted.

Nossel and PEN America have stated that the prosecution of Assange raises "grave concerns" about press freedom and lauded the decision by a British court in January 2012 not to extradite Assange. Should Nossel and PEN America have not taken this stance on Assange it would have left them in opposition to most PEN organizations around the world. PEN Centre Germany, for example, made Assange an honorary member. PEN International has called for all charges to be dropped against Assange.

But Nossel, at the same time, repeats every slanderous trope and lie used to discredit the WikiLeaks publisher facing extradition to the United States to potentially serve a 175-year sentence under the Espionage Act. She refuses to acknowledge that Assange is being persecuted because he carried out the most basic and important role of any publisher, making public documents that expose the multitudinous crimes and lies of empire. And I have not seen any direct appeals to the Biden administration on Assange's behalf from PEN America. "Whether Assange is a journalist or WikiLeaks qualifies as a press outlet is immaterial to the counts set out here," Nossel said. But, as a lawyer who was a member of the State Department task force that responded to the WikiLeaks revelations, she understands it is not immaterial. The core argument behind the U.S. effort to extradite Assange revolves around denying him the status of a publisher or a journalist and denying WikiLeaks the status of a press publication. Nossel parrots the litany of false charges leveled against Assange including that he endangered lives by not redacting documents, hacked into a government computer and meddled in the 2016 elections, all key points in the government's case against Assange. PEN America under her direction has sent out news briefs with headlines such as: "Security Reports Reveal How Assange Turned an Embassy into a Command Post for Election Meddling." The end result is that PEN America is helping to uncoil the rope to string up the WikiLeaks publisher, a gross betrayal of the core mission of PEN.

"There are some things Assange did in this case, or is alleged to have done, that go beyond what a mainstream news outlet would do, in particular the first indictment that was brought about five weeks ago focused specifically on this charge of computer hacking, hacking into a password to get beyond the government national security infrastructure and penetrate and allow Chelsea Manning to pass through all of these documents. That, I think you can say, is not what a mainstream news outlet or a journalist would do," Nossel said on The Brian Lehrer Show on WNYC on May 28, 2019.

But Nossel did not stop there, going on to defend the legitimacy of the US campaign to extradite Assange, although Assange is not a US citizen and WikiLeaks is not a US based publication. Most importantly, left unmentioned by Nossel, is that Assange has not committed any crimes.

"The reason that this indictment is coming down now is because Assange has been holed up in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London for years trying to escape his extradition request," she said on the program. "He faces an extradition request to Sweden where he has been charged with sexual assault and now this huge indictment here in the US and that proceeding will play out over a long period. He will make all sorts of arguments about why he faces a form of legal jeopardy that should immunize him from being extradited, but there are extradition treaties. There are legal assistance treaties where countries are able to prosecute nationals of other countries and bring them back to face charges when they have committed a crime. This is happening pursuant to that. There are US nationals who are charged and convicted in foreign courts."

WikiLeaks released U.S. military war logs from Afghanistan and Iraq, a cache of 250,000 diplomatic cables and 800 Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment briefs along with the 2007 "Collateral Murder" video, in which U.S. helicopter pilots banter as they gun down civilians, including children and two Reuters journalists, in a Baghdad street. The material was given to WikiLeaks in 2010 by Chelsea Manning, then private first class Pfc. Bradley Manning. Assange has been accused by an enraged U.S. intelligence community of causing "one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States." Mike Pompeo, who headed the CIA under Donald Trump, called WikiLeaks a "hostile intelligence service" aided by Russia, rhetoric embraced by Democratic Party leaders.

Assange also published 70,000 hacked emails copied from the accounts of John Podesta, Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman, and earned the eternal hatred of the Democratic Party establishment. The Podesta emails exposed the sleezy and corrupt world of the Clintons, including the donation of millions of dollars to the Clinton Foundation by Saudi Arabia and Qatar, and identified both nations as major funders of Islamic State [ISIL/ISIS]. They exposed the $657,000 that Goldman Sachs paid to Hillary Clinton to give talks, a sum so large it can only be considered a bribe. They exposed Clinton's repeated dishonesty. She was caught telling the financial elites that she wanted "open trade and open borders" and believed Wall Street executives were best positioned to manage the economy while publicly promising financial regulation and reform. The cache showed that the Clinton campaign interfered in the Republican primaries to ensure that Donald Trump was the Republican nominee, assuming he would be the easiest candidate to defeat. They exposed Clinton's advance knowledge of questions in a primary debate and her role as the principal architect of the war in Libya, a war she believed would burnish her credentials as a presidential candidate.

The Democratic Party, which blames Russian interference for its election loss to Trump, charges that the Podesta emails were obtained by Russian government hackers. Hillary Clinton calls WikiLeaks a Russian front.James Comey, the former FBI director, however, conceded that the emails were probably delivered to WikiLeaks by an intermediary, and Assange has said the emails were not provided by "state actors."

"A zealous prosecutor is going to look at someone like Assange and recognize that he's a very unpopular figure for a hundred different reasons, whether it's his meddling in the 2016 elections, his political motivations for that, or the blunderbuss nature of these disclosures," Nossel said on Leher's program. "This is not a leak that was designed to expose one particular policy or effectuate a specific change in how the US government was going about its business. It was massive and indiscriminate, while in the beginning they worked with journalists to be careful about redacting names of individuals. I was actually working at the State Department during the WikiLeaks disclosure period, and I was briefly on a task force to respond to the WikiLeaks disclosures and there was really a sense of alarm about individuals whose lives would be in danger, people who had worked with the US, provided information, human rights defenders who had spoken to embassy personnel on a confidential basis. There is a problem of over classification, but there is also good reason to classify a lot of this stuff and they made no distinction between that [which] was legitimately classified and not."

Any group of artists or writers overseen by a CEO from corporate America inevitably become members of an updated version of the Union of Soviet Writers where the human rights violations by our enemies are heinous crimes and our own violations and those of our allies are ignored or whitewashed. As Julian Benda reminded us in "The Treason of the Intellectuals," we can serve privilege and power or we can serve justice and truth. Those, Benda warns, who become apologists for those with privilege and power destroy their capacity to defend justice and truth.

Where is the outrage from an organization founded by writers to protect writers about the prolonged abuse, stress and repeated death threats, including from Nossel's former boss, Hillary Clinton, who allegedly quipped at a staff meeting, "Can't we just drone this guy?" (and didn't deny it later) or from the CIA which discussed kidnapping and assassinating Assange? Where is the demand that the trial of Assange be thrown out because the CIA through UC Global, the security firm at the embassy, secretly taped the meetings, and all other encounters, between Assange and his lawyers, obliterating attorney-client privilege? Where is the public denunciation of the extreme isolation that has left Assange, who suffered a stroke during court video proceedings on October 27, in precarious physical and psychological health? Where is the outcry over his descent into hallucinations and deep depression, leaving him dependent on antidepressant medication and the antipsychotic quetiapine? Where are the thunderous condemnations about the ten years he has been detained, seven in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London and nearly three in the high-security Belmarsh prison, where he has had to live without access to sunlight, exercise and proper medical care? "His eyes were out of sync, his right eyelid would not close, his memory was blurry," his fianc Stella Morris said of the stroke. Where are the demands for intervention and humane treatment, including an end to his isolation, once it was revealed Assange was pacing his cell until he collapsed, punching himself in the face and banging his head against the wall? Where is the fear for his life, especially after "half of a razor blade" was discovered under his socks and it was revealed that he called the suicide hotline run by the Samaritans because he thought about killing himself "hundreds of times a day"? Where is the call to prosecute those who committed the war crimes, carried out the torture and engaged in the corruption WikiLeaks exposed? Not from PEN America.

Melzer in his book "The Trial of Julian Assange," the most methodical and detailed recounting of the long persecution by the United States and the British government of Assange, blasts those like Nossel who blithely peddle the lies used to tar Assange and cater to the powerful.

When Assange was first charged, he was not charged with espionage by the United States. Rather, he was charged with a single count of "conspiracy to commit computer intrusion." This charge alleged that he conspired with Manning to decrypt a password hash for the US Department of Defense computer system. But as Melzer points out, "Manning already had full 'top secret' access privileges to the system and all the documents she leaked to Assange. So, even according to the US government, the point of the alleged attempt to decode the password hash was not to gain unauthorized access to classified information ('hacking'), but to help Manning to cover her tracks inside the system by logging in with a different identity ('source protection'). In any case, the alleged attempt undisputedly remained unsuccessful and did not result in any harm whatsoever."

Nossel's repetition of the lie that Assange endangered lives by not redacting documents was obliterated during the trial of Manning, several sessions of which I attended at Fort Meade in Maryland with Cornel West. During the court proceedings in July 2013 Brigadier General Robert Carr, a senior counterintelligence officer who headed the Information Review Task Force that investigated the impact of WikiLeaks disclosures on behalf of the US Department of Defense, told the court that the task force did not uncover a single case of someone who lost their lives due to the publication of the classified documents by WikiLeaks. As for Nossel's claim that "in the beginning they worked with journalists to be careful about redacting names of individuals" she should be aware that the decryption key to the unredacted State Department documents was not released by Assange, but Luke Harding and David Leigh from The Guardian in their book WikiLeaks: Inside Julian Assange's War on Secrecy.

When the ruling class peddles lies there is no cost for parroting them back to the public. The cost is paid by those who tell the truth.

On November 27, 2019, Melzer gave a talk at the Brandenburg Gate in Berlin to dedicate a sculpture by the Italian artist Davide Dormino. Figures of Edward Snowden, Julian Assange and Chelsea Manning, cast in bronze, stood on three chairs. A fourth chair, empty, was next to them inviting others to take a stand with them. The sculpture is called "Anything to Say?" Melzer stepped up onto the fourth chair, the hulking edifice of the US Embassy off to his right. He uttered the words that should have come from organizations like PEN America:

For decades, political dissidents have been welcomed by the West with open arms, because in their fight for human rights they were persecuted by dictatorial regimes.

Today, however, Western dissidents themselves are forced to seek asylum elsewhere, such as Edward Snowden in Russia or, until recently, Julian Assange at the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

For the West itself has begun to persecute its own dissidents, to subject them to draconian punishments in political show trials, and to imprison them as dangerous terrorists in high-security prisons under conditions that can only be described as inhuman and degrading.

Our governments feel threatened by Chelsea Manning, Edward Snowden, and Julian Assange, because they are whistleblowers, journalists, and human rights activists who have provided solid evidence for the abuse, corruption, and war crimes of the powerful, for which they are now being systematically defamed and persecuted.

They are the political dissidents of the West, and their persecution is today's witch-hunt, because they threaten the privileges of unsupervised state power that has gone out of control.

The cases of Manning, Snowden, Assange and others are the most important test of our time for the credibility of Western rule of law and democracy and our commitment to human rights.

In all these cases, it is not about the person, the character or possible misconduct of these dissidents, but about how our governments deal with revelations about of their own misconduct.

How many soldiers have been held accountable for the massacre of civilians shown in the video "Collateral Murder"? How many agents for the systematic torture of terror suspects? How many politicians and CEOs for the corrupt and inhumane machinations that have been brought to light by our dissidents?

That's what this is about. It is about the integrity of the rule of law, the credibility of our democracies and, ultimately, about our own human dignity and the future of our children.

Let us never forget that!

Nils Melzer, the U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture

The tenuous return to power of the Democratic Party under Joe Biden, and the specter of a Republican rout of the Democrats in the midterm elections next year, along with the very real possibility of the election in 2024 of Donald Trump, or a Trump-like figure to the presidency, has blinded human rights and press groups to the danger of the egregious assaults on freedom of expression perpetrated by the Biden administration. The steady march towards heavy handed state censorship was accelerated by the Obama administration that charged ten government employees and contractors, eight under the Espionage Act, for disclosing classified information to the press. The Obama administration in 2013 also seized the phone records of 20 Associated Press reporters to uncover who leaked the information about a foiled al-Qaida terrorist plot. This ongoing assault by the Democratic Party has been accompanied by the disappearing on social media platforms of several luminaries on the far right, including Donald Trump and Alex Jones, who were removed from Facebook, Apple, YouTube. Content that is true but damaging to the Democratic Party, including the revelations from Hunter Biden's laptop, have been blocked by digital platforms such as Facebook and Twitter. Algorithms have since at least 2017 marginalized left-wing content, including my own. The legal precedent set in this atmosphere by the sentencing of Assange means that anyone who possesses classified material, or anyone who leaks it, will be guilty of a criminal offense. The sentencing of Assange will signal the end of all investigative inquiries into the inner workings of power. The pandering by press and human rights organizations, tasked with being sentinels of freedom, to the Democratic Party, only contributes to the steady tightening of the vise of press censorship. There is no lesser evil in this fight. It is all evil. Left unchecked, it will result in an American species of China's totalitarianism capitalism.

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Opinion | Julian Assange, PEN America, and Ruling Class ...

Julian Assange Deserves Justice, Good and Hard – The Bulwark

Following a protracted legal battle, Julian Assangenow facesextradition to the United States after a British court ruled in favor of the Biden administrations request to prosecute the founder of WikiLeaks. Assange has been remanded in the British justice system on the grounds of his faltering mental health, but he may at last be compelled to answer for his role in obtaining and publishing secret U.S. military and diplomatic documents in 2010. He deserves to face justice in the American court system.

According to the indictment a federal grand jury approved against Assange in June 2020,

To obtain information to release on the WikiLeaks website, ASSANGE recruited sources and predicated the success of WikiLeaks in part upon the recruitment of sources to (i) illegally circumvent legal safeguards on information, including classification restrictions and computer and network access restrictions; (ii) provide that illegally obtained information to WikiLeaks for public dissemination; and (iii) continue the pattern of illegally procuring and providing classified and hacked information to WikiLeaks for distribution to the public.

That indictment charged Assange with of conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defense information, obtaining national defense information, disclosing national defense information, and hacking, all related to Assanges 2010 cooperation with Army private Chelsea Manning to steal and publish classified material. The indictment alleges he offered to help Manning crack a password stored on Defense Department computers connected to a U.S. government network used for classified documents and communications.Along with his accomplice, who downloaded four nearly complete U.S. government databases, Assange is charged with involvement in what the Justice Department has called one of the largest compromises of classified information in the history of the United States.

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Assanges defenders argue that hes being persecuted for intrepid journalism. Even some of Assanges critics have lamented that For most of these charges, the government does not attempt to differentiate Assanges behavior from that of a national security reporter. Of course, theres no reason why the Justice Departments prosecution of Assange should be subject to less scrutiny than any other prosecution. But the objection that Assanges charges. . . seriously implicate U.S. press freedoms goes too far.

Its one thing to note, as Jack Goldsmith has, that legally, the delineation between the New York Times and WikiLeaksboth of which have published classified informationis underdeveloped. Its another to object to the specific prosecution of Assange as if this case specifically were inappropriate. Amnesty International, for example, has condemned the prosecution as nothing short of a full-scale assault on the right to freedom of expression, which is a strange claim to make about a case concerning a single individual.

Assange isnt being charged with journalistic malpractice.Instead, he stands accused of spying and theftspecifically, breaking into U.S. government computers containing, according to the indictment, approximately 90,000 Afghanistan war-related significant activity reports, 400,000 Iraq war-related significant activity related reports, 800 Guantanamo Bay detainee assessment briefs, and 250,000 U.S. Department of State cables.

Assanges pilfering and dissemination of Americas secrets have done much harm to American interestsandalmost certainlyendangered valiant Afghans fighting in vain to preserve their own democracy. ButAssanges illicit activities have by no means been limited to challenging Americasdeep state.Although these actions fall outside the indictment, he also labored to undermine Americas institutions at home.Amid the 2016 presidential campaign, Assange served as an agent of the Russian intelligence services to support Donald Trump and throw the American election into chaos. WikiLeaks published lurid emails hacked from the Democratic National Committee and Clinton campaign chairman John Podesta.

Those who warn darkly of the consequences for press freedom in the Assange case could not be more mistaken.No one has unfettered freedom of action to break the law with accountability to no one but themselves. In all but a narrow legal sense, Assanges defenders, enthusiastic and otherwise, confuse the exception for the rule: The rule, both in the sense of the statutory law and the pragmatic policy, is that secret government is and ought to be secret, because the publication of classified information can and does imperil he national security of the country, imperiling the foundation of law itself. The exception is that honest, careful, and public-spirited journalistsof which Assange is decidedly not oneare almost always exempted from prosecution of this law because their work is important for the civic health of the country.

Assange has proven that he is not a journalist deserving of deference, but an agent of one (or more) hostile foreign power(s), and he should answer for his crimes to an American court. Far from presenting a test case for journalistic freedom, Assange presents a clear example of why laws against espionage exist in the first place. If he is granted lenience, then the exception will have swallowed the rule, and government secrecy will mean nothing. National security and the rule of law itself will suffer.

In his first State of the Union address, George Washington extolled the spirit of liberty and the virtue of just authority that Assange has so contemptuously transgressed. The security of a free Constitution, Washington declared, depends on teaching the people themselves to know and to value their own rights; to discern and provide against invasions of them; to distinguish between oppression and the necessary exercise of lawful authority; To discriminate the spirit of liberty from that of licentiousness.

Thosewho know and value their own rightsshould not be tempted to regard Assange as anything but an (alleged) licentious criminal. He ought to be treated accordingly.

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Julian Assange Deserves Justice, Good and Hard - The Bulwark

Julian Assange appeals decision permitting US extradition …

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange filed an appeal Thursday to challenge a decision of the London High Court of Justice, which opened the door for his extradition to the US on charges of spying. If the appeal is granted, the case will be heard at the UK Supreme Court.

The Queens Bench Division of the London High Court of Justice overturned the Westminster Magistrates Courts decision earlier this month preventing Assange from being extradited. In doing so, the Court rejected Assanges assertion that he could not be removed under the Extradition Act of 2003 due to mental health concerns, and found the US governments assurances regarding the Assanges treatment sufficient to allow for extradition despite the Acts requirements.

The said assurances included a commitment by the US government not to hold Assange at its Florence, Colorado facilitythe highest level maximum security prison in the countryor under special administrative measures such as solitary confinement, which could cause his mental condition to deteriorate. US authorities also indicated their willingness to transfer Assange to a facility in his home country of Australia to serve his sentence if convicted.

Assanges appeal challenges the reasoning of the Queens Bench regarding US assurances, which he claims are discretionary and ultimately meaningless. Assanges lawyer Stella Moris, stated that a decision on the appeal is not expected until the third week of January.

Assange has been in custody since 2019, despite serving a sentence for violating bail conditions in an unrelated case, and spent seven years at Ecuadors embassy in London to avoid being removed to Sweden to face sexual assault allegations. These allegations were later dropped. Assange faces 175 years in prison for exposing US war crimes in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantnamo.

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Julian Assange appeals decision permitting US extradition ...

Julian Assanges lawyers seek UK appeal against US extradition – Al Jazeera English

WikiLeaks founder files application to appeal recent ruling that opens the way to extradition in the US.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assanges legal team has filed an application to appeal to Britains Supreme Court, after a lower court ruled this month that he can be extradited to the United States on spying charges.

The lawyers on Thursday asked for permission to appeal the High Courts ruling, arguing that the US governments pledge that the founder of the whistleblowing website would not be subjected to extreme conditions in prison was conditional and could be changed at the discretion of US authorities.

Stella Moris, a lawyer and the mother of Assanges two children, said in a statement that a decision is not expected to be reached before the third week of January. The Supreme Court is Britains final court of appeal.

US authorities accuse 50-year-old Assange of 18 counts relating to WikiLeaks release of vast troves of confidential US military records and diplomatic cables relating to its wars in Afghanistan and Iraq, which they said had put lives in danger.

Assange moved a step closer to facing criminal charges in the US on December 10, after Washington won an appeal over his extradition in Londons High Court.

The court said it was satisfied with assurances about the conditions of Assanges detention, including a pledge not to hold him at the supermax penitentiary in Florence, Colorado, the highest security prison in the country, or under special administrative measures including isolation, which could cause his mental condition to deteriorate.

US authorities also said that the Australian-born Assange could be transferred to Australia to serve his sentence if convicted.

The High Court ruling reversed an earlier judgement by a British magistrates court that it would be oppressive to extradite him to the US justice system due to his mental health and the risk of suicide.

Assange could be jailed for up to 175 years in the US, although the exact sentence is difficult to estimate.

He has been in custody since 2019, despite having served a previous sentence for breaching bail conditions in a separate case, and spent seven years at Ecuadors embassy in London to avoid being removed to Sweden to face sexual assault allegations that were later dropped.

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Julian Assanges lawyers seek UK appeal against US extradition - Al Jazeera English

Julian Assange given permission to marry partner in prison …

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been given permission to marry his partner, lawyer Stella Moris, in prison

ByThe Associated Press

November 12, 2021, 10:36 AM

2 min read

LONDON -- WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has been granted permission to marry his partner, Stella Moris, in prison, British authorities say.

Assange has been held in Londons high-security Belmarsh Prison since 2019 as he fights a U.S. attempt to extradite him on espionage charges.

The couple began their relationship during Assange's seven years living in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to avoid extradition to Sweden on unrelated sex offenses allegations. Assange and Moris, a South Africa-born lawyer, have two young sons: Gabriel, 4, and Max, 2.

I am relieved that reason prevailed, and I hope there will be no further interference with our marriage, Moris said.

In January, a judge refused a U.S. request to extradite Assange, but he remains in prison while a higher court considers the U.S. government's appeal.

Assange and Moris made their relationship public in April 2020 and had applied to prison authorities for permission to wed.

They threatened legal action against the prison governor and Justice Secretary Dominic Raab, accusing them of trying to prevent the marriage from taking place.

Mr. Assanges application was received, considered and processed in the usual way by the prison governor, as for any other prisoner, the Prison Service said Thursday.

No date has yet been set for the wedding.

U.S. prosecutors have indicted Assange on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse over WikiLeaks publication of thousands of leaked military and diplomatic documents a decade ago.

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Julian Assange given permission to marry partner in prison ...

Julian Assange Now: Where is He Today? Is He Still in Jail …

Originally from Australia, Julian Assange rose to prominence in 2010 when his website, WikiLeaks, posted numerous classified United States government and army documents. His actions made him face prosecution in the United States, and for the previous few years, Assanges fate hung in the balance as the entire world watched on. We Steal Secrets: The Story of WikiLeaks details Assanges life and follows his whereabouts following the 2010 incident. Lets delve into the details and find out where Assange is at present, shall we?

Julian Assange started WikiLeaks in 2006 with the intent to reveal a plethora of pertinent information. Although he published numerous reports and documents from its inception, the publication of over half a million classified US government and army documents in 2010 threw him into the spotlight. It was later revealed that army analyst Chelsea Manning (Bradley Manning) was the one who leaked the documents. While Chelsea was prosecuted according to US laws, various agencies called out for Assange to be held responsible.

Moreover, reports claim that Assange was accused of rape in Sweden, which ultimately led to his arrest in England in 2010. Sweden immediately appealed for him to be deported, and although a judge initially greenlighted the extradition, Assange appealed to the Supreme Court to stay the order. Around this time, Assange remained on house arrest in Norfolk from where he appeared on a talk show called The World Tomorrow, won the Sydney Peace Foundations gold medal, and also saw his memoir Julian Assange: The Unauthorised Autobiography get published, albeit reportedly against his will.

In 2012, the Supreme Court denied Assanges request and thus, worried about a possible prosecution by the US, the WikiLeaks founder chose to take refuge in the Ecuadoran embassy. From his refuge, he formed the WikiLeaks Party and decided to compete for a seat in the Australian Senate in the 2013 elections but remained unsuccessful. Moreover, reports even claim that he even tried to affect the 2016 US presidential elections by releasing numerous confidential communications between Hillary Clintons campaign and the Democratic Party in the days leading up to the vote.

Ultimately, in 2019, the Ecuadorian government refused to keep Assange under refuge, claiming that he broke international laws as well as the conditions he had agreed upon before taking asylum. Thus, after agreeing not to deport Assange to a country where he would be tortured or put to death, English authorities were finally able to take him into custody.

Following his arrest in 2019, the Swedish Government decided to drop the rape case against Assange and announced that it would not be investigated any further. On the other hand, the US Department of Justice officially indicted Assange on 18 counts of computer misuse and espionage charges which could see him get a total of 175 years in prison if found guilty.

With the United States asking for Julian Assange to be extradited in 2020, the WikiLeaks founder official appeared in court and formally submitted a petition against the proposed extradition. Finally, in January 2021, Assanges appeal was accepted, and a British judge ordered a stay on the deportation. It was ruled that such a move would prove disastrous to his mental health, and Assange might even take his own life if thrust into harsh US prison conditions.

At present, Julian Assange remains incarcerated in the HM Prison Belmarsh as he was denied bail in January 2021. It was revealed that while Assange remained under refuge, he met and got close to Stella Moris, a member of his legal team which helped him fight the extradition bids from Sweden and the United States. The relationship between the two soon turned romantic, and the couple even parented two young boys.

With Assange still behind bars, a June 2021 report claimed that he did not want to wait and planned to tie the knot with Stella Moris at a wedding ceremony inside the high-security prison. It is pertinent to note that the court battle is still ongoing.

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Julian Assange Now: Where is He Today? Is He Still in Jail ...

Julian Assanges mother tells of unending pain over possible US extradition – The Canary

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The mother of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has spoken of her unending, gut-wrenching pain over her sons possible extradition to the US. The 50-year-old is facing extradition to the US over espionage charges relating to the publication of classified military information in 2010 and 2011 by WikiLeaks.

His mother Christine has written an open letter describing her fears over her son remaining in prison for the rest of his life.

She said:

Fifty years ago in giving birth for the first time as a young mother, I thought there could be no greater pain. But it was soon forgotten when I held my beautiful baby boy in my arms. I named him Julian.

I realise now that I was wrong. There is a greater pain.

Read on...

The unending, gut-wrenching pain of being the mother of a multi-award winning journalist who had the courage to publish the truth about high-level government crimes and corruption.

The pain of watching my son, who sought to publish important truths, being endlessly globally smeared.

The pain of watching my son, who risked his life to expose injustice, being fitted up and denied a fair legal process, over and over again.

She spoke of her son being cruelly psychologically tortured by the authorities.

Christine Assange added:

The constant nightmare of him being extradited to the US and being buried alive in extreme solitary confinement for the rest of his life. The constant fear the CIA will carry out its plans to assassinate him.

The rush of sadness as I saw his frail, exhausted body slumping from a mini-stroke in the last hearing due to chronic stress.

Many people are also traumatised by seeing a vengeful superpower using its unlimited resources to bully and destroy a single defenceless individual.

I wish to thank all the caring, decent citizens globally protesting Julians brutal political persecution.

Please keep raising your voices to your politicians till its all they can hear. His life is in your hands.

Julian Assange has spent the past two years in Belmarsh Prison in London after almost a decade hiding in the Ecuadorian embassy in the capital. He is facing a renewed push for his extradition to the US after the High Court last week overturned a previous ruling against such a move.

Australias deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce also came to his defence, saying they should either try Assange in Britain or allow him to return to his home nation. Assanges fiancee has accused UK authorities of playing the role of executioner after he suffered a mini-stroke in prison.

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Julian Assanges mother tells of unending pain over possible US extradition - The Canary