Julian Assange Claims Russia Wasn’t Involved in DNC Hack …

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In an interview with Russia Today, Assange said, Russia has been brought up by Hillary Clinton just a few days ago, so I think it is necessary to address what Wikileaks feels is its perception of its own publication.

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There are claims that in the meta data, someone has done a document in a PDF conversion, and that in some cases the language used in the documents is Russian, and therefore the computer that was used for that conversion was Russian, he said.

That is the circumstantial evidence that some Russian, or someone who wanted to make them look like a Russian, was involved, with these other media organisations. That is not the case for the material that we released, he continued.

The material in question revealed tactics used by the DNC to derail Bernie Sanders campaign for the Democratic nomination.

Wikileakshave previouslyrefused to confirm whether Russia was behind the hack, with Assange saying that the organisationlikesto create maximum ambiguity as to who our sources are.

Assange hasconsistently pledged to release a lot more on Hillary Clinton and the corruption of the Clinton Foundation in the coming weeks.

You can follow Ben Kew on Facebook, on Twitter at @ben_kew,oremail him at ben@yiannopoulos.net

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Julian Assange gives guarded praise of Trump and blasts …

Leading up to the election, Julian Assange used his whistleblowing website to publish a cascade of emails connected to the Democratic party and the Clinton campaign. Photograph: Carl Court/Getty Images

Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, has offered guarded praise of Donald Trump, arguing the president-elect is not a DC insider and could mean an opportunity for positive as well as negative change in the US.

Assange described his feelings about the US election results in an interview as mixed before going on to sharply criticize Democratic nominee Hillary Clinton and providing a more ambivalent assessment of Trumps ascent to the White House.

Hillary Clintons election would have been a consolidation of power in the existing ruling class of the United States, Assange told the Italian newspaper la Repubblica.

Donald Trump is not a DC insider, he is part of the wealthy ruling elite of the United States, and he is gathering around him a spectrum of other rich people and several idiosyncratic personalities.

He added: They do not by themselves form an existing structure, so it is a weak structure which is displacing and destabilising the pre-existing central power network within DC. It is a new patronage structure which will evolve rapidly, but at the moment its looseness means there are opportunities for change in the United States: change for the worse and change for the better.

In the week leading up to the election, Assange used his whistleblowing website to publish a cascade of emails connected to the Democratic party and the Clinton campaign.

The releases were highly damaging to Clinton, and US intelligence officials now believe they were hacked by Russia and passed to WikiLeaks to boost Trumps bid for the White House. Assange has repeatedly declined to be drawn on the source of the hacked emails he published.

Roger Stone, a longtime Republican operative and associate of Trump, said in August that he had been in communication with Assange over an October surprise to foil Clinton. WikiLeaks began publishing emails hacked from the Democratic National Committee and the email account of Clintons campaign chairman, John Podesta, in October.

It is impossible to know how much the email disclosures affected the outcome of the race, but there is little doubt the revelations harmed Clintons prospects during the crucial last weeks of the campaign.

Assange made the disclosures from the Ecuadorean embassy in London, where he has been hold up for more than four years, claiming asylum to avoid extradition to Sweden, where prosecutors are investigating allegations of rape against him. Assange denies the accusations.

Some of the earliest and most high-profile WikiLeaks revelations, including those based on leaks by Chelsea Manning, occurred when Clinton was secretary of state.

Hillary Clinton and the network around her imprisoned one of our alleged sources for 35 years, Chelsea Manning, tortured her according to the United Nations, in order to implicate me personally, Assange claimed in the interview. He went on to accuse Clinton of being the chief proponent and architect of the military intervention in Libya, which he claimed had created instability throughout the region and the refugee crisis in Europe.

Appearing to suggest the disclosures in the run-up to the election were a form of payback, he added: If someone and their network behave like that, then there are consequences. Internal and external opponents are generated. Now there is a separate question on what Donald Trump means.

Assange, who briefly hosted his own talkshow on the state-owned television network Russia Today, has long had a close relationship with the Putin regime. In his interview with la Repubblica, he said there was no need for WikiLeaks to undertake a whistleblowing role in Russia because of the open and competitive debate he claimed exists there.

In Russia, there are many vibrant publications, online blogs and Kremlin critics, such as [Alexey] Navalny, are part of that spectrum, he said. There are also newspapers like Novaya Gazeta, in which different parts of society in Moscow are permitted to critique each other and it is tolerated, generally, because it isnt a big TV channel that might have a mass popular effect, its audience is educated people in Moscow. So my interpretation is that in Russia there are competitors to WikiLeaks.

Dozens of journalists have been killed in Russia in the past two decades, and Freedom House considers the Russian press to be not free and notes: The main national news agenda is firmly controlled by the Kremlin. The government sets editorial policy at state-owned television stations, which dominate the media landscape and generate propagandistic content.

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Julian Assange Stalls, Reveals No Leaks About Hillary Clinton …

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Assange appeared via satellite from his perch at Londons Ecuadorian embassy at 5:02 AM Eastern Time wearing a black truth T-shirt, two hours after Wikileaks tenth anniversary press conference convened in Berlin.

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Ive seen the Internet and theres enormous expectation in the United States, Assange said. Some of that expectation is partly answered but you have to understand that if were going to make a major publication in relation to the United States at a particular hour, we dont do it at 3 AM.

We have a great many upcoming publications, Assange promised, noting thatOur sources have suffered terrible consequences in the United States. Assange has implied that murdered DNC staffer Seth Rich was a Wikileaks source.

Assange said that Wikileaks will be publishing once a week for the next ten weeks with a special interest in the U.S. election and topics like war, surveillance, and Google.

Theres been a lot of misquoting of me, Assange said when asked if his upcoming publications would destroy Hillary Clinton.

In this particular case, the misquoting has to do with, we want to harm Hillary Clinton, or I want to harm Hillary Clinton. Assange said that some in the United States want to personalize his upcoming publications.

Expectant watchers filled the comments on Right Side Broadcastings Youtube livestream of the event with taunts of Boring, ZZZZZZ, and Assange is a no show. One commenter compared the event to Geraldo Riveras ill-fated entry into Al Capones secret vault, where Rivera found nothing interesting inside.

The press conference convened at 4:06 AM Eastern Time in Berlin from a dimly lit auditorium with a rudimentary projection screen.

A woman representing Wikileaks introduced a video montage commemorating the organizations biggest hits over its ten-year run, including its publication of documents and videos pertaining to the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan some of which were leaked to the group by Bradley Manning and the operating procedures at Guantanamo Bay prison. The woman extensively recapped some of Wikileaks most divisive cases, claiming that the group has endured dDos cyber attacks and propaganda attacks from enemy forces.

The woman, referencing the Democratic National Committee email leak that complicated the Democratic convention in Philadelphia, said that Wikileaks is now getting hit with another major propaganda attack. The woman outright denied that anyone at Wikileaks is a Russian spy, citing thousands of documents that Wikileaks has published exposing the regime of Bashar al Assad, a Russian ally.

For us, these kinds of attacks are quite interesting, she said. The lesson weve learned through these propaganda attacks is just to keep publishing And so we will keep publishing.

A small panel ensued, with Wikileaks officials talking about their biggest cases.

Wikileaks then showed a video collecting Fox News, Rush Limbaugh, and C-SPAN segments in which U.S. politicos, mostly Republicans like Mitch McConnell and Karl Rove, called for Assanges arrest and prosecution. One of Assanges attorneys spoke about Assanges indefinite detention at the Ecuadorian embassy. The lawyer made reference to the smear campaign caused by the DNC leaks and to Hillary Clintons desire, stated in a private meeting, to drone Assange.

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Sean Hannity to Julian Assange: Youve Done Us a Favor …

The WikiLeaks founder got Hannitized again Thursday, calling in for a gushing phone interview with the Fox News star who once called for his jailing.

The bizarre Sean Hannity-WikiLeaks bromance has now only grown more loving.

On Thursday afternoon, Hannity, the Fox News host and informal Trump adviser, once again interviewed WikiLeaks chief Julian Assangethis time on Hannitys nationally syndicated radio show. Hannity gave Assange a large platform to deny that the source of the DNC and John Podesta emails was the Russian government, and to also join Hannity in some fairly typical bashing of Hillary Clinton and the liberal mainstream media.

Hannity, who could barely contain his excitement to have Assange on the program, had teased the interview on Twitter earlier in the day as his first interview in the states since the election.

You've done us a favor, Hannity gushed on-air. Thanks to Assange and WikiLeakss work, Hannity said, we can now fix the problem of our gaps in U.S. cybersecurity. (The DNC and Podesta emails were a wake-up call, in a sense.) Assange also exposed the corruption in our government for all to see.

I have so many questions for you, Hannity said, before reminding his audience of WikiLeakss perfect record: You have not been proven wrong, not one single time, he reiterated.

When asked if President Obama was trying to delegitimize Donald Trumpby promoting any evidence of Russian interference and cyberattacks aimed at helping Trump to defeat Clinton in the election)Assange answered firmly, yes.

This wouldnt be the first time that the CIA would be politicized, Hannity continued, making a Benghazi analogy.

Assange also wagged his finger at the liberal press in America that tried to make Trump voters feel ashamed of themselves for supporting the Republican candidate.

What is the difference between what you and WikiLeaks have done, and what The New York Times and CNN [have done]? the host inquired.

Our stuff has more impact, Assange replied.

Touch, Hannity answered. I cant disagree with that.

The conservative host continued to make the case that the so-called mainstream media was trying to scapegoat Assange, and that if [Hillary] were a Republican theyd be singing your praises day and night.

America owes you a debt of gratitude, Hannity said, concluding their friendly chat. We hope you come on [my TV show] soon.

Hannity is, at least, self-aware about how much of a flip-flop it was for him to morph into a Julian Assange super-fan during the 2016 presidential race.

Six years ago, Hannity accused Assange of waging war against the U.S. by publishing secret diplomatic cables that he said put American lives in jeopardy and danger all over the world. The Fox star asked why the Obama administration hadnt arrested Assange, wondering, why we can stop pirating music and Hollywood movies, but we cant stop this guy from stealing highly classified documents that puts peoples lives at risk?

Now that Assange is more widely known for being anti-Hillary, it seems, Hannity is ever-willing to let bygones be bygones.

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Julian Assange defies Swedish prosecutors by releasing …

Julian Assange claims an early leak of information from the Swedish police helped establish an aura of guilt around him. Photograph: Dominic Lipinski/PA

Julian Assange has thumbed his nose at Swedish investigators, who he says have robbed him of his freedom for six years, by releasing the answers he gave to them under questioning in Ecuadors London embassy last month.

The decision to issue the statement, which contains for the first time a detailed account by the WikiLeaks founder of his encounter with a woman in August 2010 who made rape allegations against him, marks a fresh twist in a case in which Assange claims an early leak of information from the Swedish police has shaped opinion.

The transcript of a police interview with the woman was leaked to media in December 2010, which the Australian, who has not been charged with any crime, says helped to establish an aura of guilt around him.

Since then, Assange has repeatedly asked to be allowed to tell his side of the story to prosecutors, but until recently they insisted he come to Sweden for questioning. Assange has been confined to Ecuadors cramped London embassy since June 2012, after claiming asylum to avoid extradition over the allegations.

I am now releasing my statement to the public, Assange says in a letter accompanying the document. The reason is simple. I want people to know the truth about how abusive this process has been.

The release of the statement is likely to be met with dismay in Sweden, where prosecutors desire for personal aspects of the case to remain confidential has led them to deny Assange access to evidence against him, because of the risk that it might become public.

The move was condemned by Elisabeth Massi Fritz, the lawyer for Assanges accuser, who said that his decision to release details of their relationship the statement was unfortunate.

She later accused Assange of violating her client in the media. Assange seems to be desperate. As soon as he has something to say he calls the media and is conducting the investigation through the media, she told Swedish broadcaster SVT.

The only thing I can say is that Assange has low credibility, which we will prove when we prosecute. I expect the prosecutor to issue charges. I also expect Assange to stop violating my client in the media. She has suffered more than enough for six years.

In correspondence with Ecuador over the conditions of Assanges interrogation, the Swedish prosecutor in the case, Marianne Ny, insisted the proceedings remain private to protect the plaintiff. A spokesperson for Ny told the Guardian she was awaiting the formal report on the interviews from Ecuador, due this month, before deciding on her next step.

The statement, which Assange read out to investigators in response to their questioning, contains a sustained attack on the prosecutor, for whom he claims the interview in London was simply a ruse to tick a box to ensure the technical possibility to indict me. Under Swedish law, an interview with the suspect is an essential step before issuing charges.

The statement fleshes out Assanges argument that he is at risk of extradition from Sweden to the US to face espionage charges and potentially a life behind bars.

Last week, the UNs working group on arbitrary detention rejected an appeal by the UK against its February ruling that the risks facing Assange if he leaves the embassy mean his situation amounts to a prolonged deprivation of liberty in breach of the principles of reasonableness, necessity and proportionality.

Until now, Assange has not described his sexual encounter with his accuser. He has not publicly apologised to her or tried to mitigate the distress she has been caused.

Assanges statement says that, owing to US hostility towards WikiLeaks, his bank cards were blocked after his arrival in Sweden in the summer of 2010 at the peak of the Pentagons conflict with him over the release of a trove of diplomatic and military documents. This made him highly dependent on the hospitality of others.

The woman appeared to be sympathetic to my plight and also appeared to be romantically interested in me, Assange told prosecutors. She was not close to people I was close to, so it seemed that those who meant me harm would be unlikely to try to find me by monitoring her movements.

She made it very clear that she wanted to have sexual intercourse with Assange and placed his hands on her breasts while in a cinema, he continued. I felt concerned about the intensity of [her] interest and I also deeply loved another woman, which played on my mind and left me emotionally distracted.

The intensity of her interest made him fear how she might react if she felt he was rejecting her, he said. He claimed he later discovered she had collected dozens of photos of him in the weeks before they met, her Flickr photo account filled with pages and pages of photos of Assange.

After they had unprotected sex, she wanted him to have a test for sexually transmitted diseases, the statement continues.

We were in agreement and arranged to meet the following day in the nearby park around lunchtime, when I would have time to get tested. She said she was fine and seemed at ease. You can imagine my disbelief when I woke the next morning to the news that I had been arrested in my absence for rape and that police were hunting all over Stockholm for me.

Assange claims that text messages sent by the woman at the time access to which his lawyers were allowed only briefly and early in the case show that she was not asleep during the sex.

I was certain [she] was not asleep. I was also certain she expressly consented to unprotected sex before such intercourse started. The woman has insisted that a prerequisite of intercourse was that a condom be used.

He claims the texts also show that the woman said at the time she did not want to put any charges on Julian Assange, but that the police were keen on getting their hands on him and that she was shocked when they arrested him because she only wanted him to take a test.

According to the transcripts leaked to the Guardian in 2010, the woman told police she met Assange at a seminar at which he was speaking, and afterwards went to the cinema with him, where they kissed in the back row.

Two days later, she arranged to meet him and they went to her flat. They started to have sex, she said, but she moved away because Assange had not wanted to wear a condom, and he fell asleep. She told police they later had sex at least once when he had unwillingly worn a condom, but the following morning, after she had gone to buy breakfast and then climbed back into bed and fallen asleep, she had woken to find him having sex with her without a condom.

According to the statement, she told him: You better not have HIV and he answered Of course not, but she couldnt be bothered to tell him one more time because she had been going on about the condom all night. She had never had unprotected sex before. The statement says that she bought the morning after pill and took an STD test but when she telephoned Assange asking him to be tested he said he didnt have the time.

Assange has made no secret of his contempt for the Swedish prosecutor, but his decision to release his side of the story appears calculated to place further pressure on Ny to end the stalemate in the case, either by issuing a rape charge and implicitly explaining the evidence for the charge or lifting the arrest warrant against him.

In the past the prosecution has fed partial information to tabloids that politically oppose me, Assange said. It is better that my statement, which I am happy with, and which makes it obvious to all that I am innocent, sees the light in full.

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Julian Assange defies Swedish prosecutors by releasing ...

‘Julian Assange should receive the Nobel Peace Prize’ George …

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George Galloway speaking in the Commons in 2013

Controversial Wikileaks co-founder Julian Assange "should receive the Nobel Peace Prize", former MP George Galloway has claimed, in a heated appearance at the Cambridge Union.

The former Labour and Respect Party MP answered questions from students at the debating society, where he also pledged his backing to Jeremy Corbyn.

A Labour MP from 1987, he was banned from the party in 2003 following his criticism of the Iraq War. However, when asked how the party's new leader would change Labour he said he regretted being expelled.

He said: "I spent nearly 30 years as a member of parliament and I would of course still have liked to be a Labour MP, the title of Labour MP is still something."

He described Corbyn as a "fantastic change", adding "Jeremy Corbyn has my absolute loyalty, support and love, and I wish him every success."

He was also asked about the union's recent decision to invite Assange to address students via video link, following a referendum of its members.

Assange has claimed asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London since 2012, following allegations of rape made against him.

Galloway has previously faced criticism for describing Assange's behaviour as "bad sexual etiquette", but spoke to clarify his comments.

He said: "I regret the words I said in standing up for Julian Assange, I regret those words have given my enemies opportunities to attack me and attack him and I am sorry I upset some people."

However, he added: "Julian Assange should receive the Nobel Peace Prize.

"He has performed a service to the world and to those with enquiring minds.

"I am therefore glad the Cambridge students did what they should have done in the referendum in the last few days and he will be able to speak to you for himself."

He also branded Chancellor George Osborne a "pasty-faced product of the English ruling elite" who couldn't "cut the mustard" as Tory leader, saying the 2020 election would be "a much closer contest than the pundits will have you believe".

In a heated exchange with questions from the chamber he told one student to "shut up", while another branded him an "ogre", to jeers from the crowd.

When asked about his work on Iranian state TV he described Iran as a "great country", adding "Britain is the last country in the whole world that should be lecturing the Iranians on how to operate."

He also dubbed himself a "humble agitator" and "a soldier" in the Middle East peace process, defending his refusal to debate with an Israeli student at the Oxford Union in 2013.

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Julian Assange | Sam Adams Awards | Oxford Union – YouTube

Julian Assange gives his address live via Videolink to the Oxford Union Society. SUBSCRIBE for more speakers http://is.gd/OxfordUnion Facebook @ http://fb.me/theoxfordunion Twitter @ http://www.twitter.com/OxfordUnion Oxford Union Website @ http://www.oxford-union.org/

Julian Assange begins his address by saying that in 2007-08 he was looking at what was happening in Iran. He says that a lot of people did good work, especially Thomas Fingar in:

Trying to correct the movement towards war with Iran based on lies.

He says one of the worst modern deceptions of the western world happened only in 2003 where we went to war with Iraq based on lies where over 100, 000 people were killed and millions of Iraqi refugees displaced as a result.

In 2008 WikiLeaks published Iraq's classified rules of engagement for the US army. In those rules there was a section that permitted a border skirmish to start up that allowed US troops to go into Iran under a variety of circumstances. Because of the leak Iran held a press conference saying that in no way are the US allowed into their territory. After this a second rules of engagement was published omitting the border skirmish. Between 20% and 50% of all wars have started as a result of these border skirmishes. 45 hostile military bases surrounds Iran's borders, because of this there is a constant fear of being invaded making for a very tense atmosphere in the country.

He makes the point that WikiLeaks is not against intelligence agencies but mentions that corruption within intelligence agencies is born out of secrecy.

Intelligence analysts mustn't be held responsible to the public through cultural bias but must be responsible to historical record.

He mentions the WikiLeaks movie saying that it's a mass propaganda attack against the WikiLeaks organisation, also it fans the flames for war on Iran as is demonstrated in the opening scene of the film that is read out by Assange who has the script. The movie shows Iran as having an active nuclear program when intelligence reports have revealed in high confidence that this is not the case.

Filmed on Wednesday 23rd January 2013

ABOUT JULIAN ASSANGE: Known worldwide as the founder and public face of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange has made headlines across the world by exposing government misconduct. He has championed the principle of freedom of information, yet some have criticised his activities as reckless and dangerous. Under Assange's leadership, WikiLeaks has published innumerable classified diplomatic cables and played a crucial role in shaping the international political landscape. He is currently living as a fugitive in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London

ABOUT THE OXFORD UNION SOCIETY: The Union is the world's most prestigious debating society, with an unparalleled reputation for bringing international guests and speakers to Oxford. It has been established for 189 years, aiming to promote debate and discussion not just in Oxford University, but across the globe.

Rights managed by Oxford Media Associates http://www.oxfordmediaassociates.com/

Filmed by Oxford Media Solutions http://www.oxfordmediasolutions.co.uk

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Julian Assange | Sam Adams Awards | Oxford Union - YouTube

Julian Assange: UK police drop 24-hour embassy guard

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Julian Assange, founder of the website WikiLeaks, has been a key figure in major leaks of classified government documents, cables and videos since his site launched in 2006.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange holds a copy of The Guardian newspaper in London on July 26, 2010, a day after WikiLeaks posted more than 90,000 classified documents related to the Afghanistan War.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange attends a seminar at the Swedish Trade Union Confederation in Stockholm on August 14, 2010. Six days later, Swedish prosecutors issued a warrant for his arrest based on allegations of sexual assault from two women.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange displays a page from WikiLeaks on October 23, 2010, in London. WikiLeaks released approximately 400,000 classified military documents from the Iraq War the day before.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange and his bodyguards are seen after a news conference in Geneva, Switzerland, on November 4, 2010. It was the month WikiLeaks began releasing diplomatic cables from U.S. embassies.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange sits behind the tinted window of a police vehicle at Westminster Magistrates court in London on December 14, 2010. Assange had turned himself in to London authorities on December 7 and was released on bail and put on house arrest on December 16.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange supporters stand outside Belmarsh Magistrates Court in London on February 24, 2011, as a judge ruled in favor of Assange's extradition to Sweden.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Copies of the "unauthorized autobiography" of Assange sit on display in a bookstore in Edinburgh, Scotland, on September 22, 2011. Earlier that month, WikiLeaks released more than 250,000 U.S. diplomatic cables.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange speaks to demonstrators from the steps of St. Paul's Cathedral in London on October 15, 2011.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Two police officers stand guard outside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London on June 20, 2012, after Assange took refuge there to avoid arrest and extradition by British police. Ecuador granted him asylum in August 2012.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange speaks from a window of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London on December 20, 2012. Facing arrest by British officials, Assange has not set foot outside the embassy since June 2012.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange appears with Ecuadorian Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino on the balcony of the embassy on June 16, 2013.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Benedict Cumberbatch stars as Assange in the film "The Fifth Estate." Assange refused to meet the actor, stating: "I believe you are well-intentioned, but surely you can see why it is a bad idea for me to meet with you. By meeting with you, I would validate this wretched film, and endorse the talented, but debauched, performance that the script will force you to give."

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange speaks during a panel discussion at the South By Southwest Festival in Austin, Texas, in March 2014.

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange

Assange attends a news conference inside the Ecuadorian Embassy in London in August.

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Julian Assange: UK police drop 24-hour embassy guard

Julian Assange can’t leave London embassy to get an MRI

Julian Assange photographed inside the embassy on Jun. 14, 2013.

Image: Pool/Associated Press

By Blathnaid HealyUK2015-10-15 12:11:06 UTC

LONDON Wikileaks founder Julian Assange needs an MRI for pain in his shoulder, but if he leaves the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he's been taking refuge since 2012, he'll be arrested.

The Ecuadorian government made an appeal for Assange to be given safe passage out of the embassy for a shoulder scan, but Britain's Foreign Office said the European arrest warrant is still valid, according to multiple reports. Assange faces extradition to Sweden for questioning about alleged sex crimes, which he denies.

We did ask the British government for a safe passage for humanitarian reasons in coordination with Ecuador, so that Julian Assange can get an MRI, Ricardo Patio, Ecuador's foreign minister said at a briefing, according to The Guardian.

The reply we have had from Britain is that he can leave whenever he likes for any medical care he might need, but the European arrest warrant for Assange is still valid. In other words, he can leave and we will put him in jail."

The foreign minister, reading out a letter from Assange's doctor, said the Australian has been in constant pain since June 2015, and the machine can't be brought to the embassy because of its size.

"There is no history of acute injury to the area. I examined him and all movements of his shoulder (abduction, internal rotation and external rotation) are limited due to pain," he said, according to ITV News.

"I am unable to elicit the exact cause of his symptoms without the benefit of further diagnostic tests, [including] MRI."

Earlier this week, police in London removed their around-the-clock guarding of the Ecuadorian Embassy, which had been in place for the duration of his stay.

The force says it will still do its best to arrest Assange.

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Julian Assange can't leave London embassy to get an MRI

Julian Assange: police removed from outside Ecuadorian …

Scotland Yard has called off its multimillion pound 24-hour surveillance of the Ecuadorian embassy where Julian Assange has been living for 40 months, having decided the operation is no longer proportionate.

The WikiLeaks founder, an Australian national, sought political asylum at the embassy in June 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden, where prosecutors want to question him over rape allegations. In August they dropped their investigation into two other claims one of sexual molestation and one of unlawful coercion because they ran out of time to question him.

Metropolitan police officers have maintained a constant watch of the embassy in Knightsbridge, central London, at a cost of at least 11.1m, according to figures released by Scotland Yard in June.

A statement from the Metropolitan Police Service (MPS) on Monday said the operation to arrest Assange continued but it was no longer proportionate to commit officers to a permanent presence.

The MPS will not discuss what form its continuing operation will take or the resourcing implications surrounding it, it continued. Whilst no tactics guarantee success in the event of Julian Assange leaving the embassy, the MPS will deploy a number of overt and covert tactics to arrest him.

Kristinn Hrafnsson, a spokesman for WikiLeaks, said he did not know why the police had abandoned its 24-hour presence. My interpretation is that it has not been lifted. They are calling off the uniformed presence but escalating the covert operation and will arrest him if he steps out off the embassy.

A reduced police presence does not fundamentally change the situation. Hrafnsson speculated that the move might be a way of moving the costs of the uniformed presence, which infuriated the public, to the covert operation.

He added that the move comes ahead of an expected ruling by the UN working group on arbitrary detention, which he expected to find in favour of Assange.

In its statement, Scotland Yard said there was no imminent prospect of a diplomatic or legal resolution to this issue.

Like all public services, MPS resources are finite, the statement said. With so many different criminal, and other, threats to the city it protects, the current deployment of officers is no longer believed proportionate.

WikiLeaks earlier reacted to the announcement by tweeting:

Two women made allegations against Assange five years ago in Stockholm, but no charges were brought because the prosecutor said she was unable to interrogate him.

Related: Julian Assange: key events leading up to WikiLeaks founder seeking asylum

A European arrest warrant was issued in December 2010 and he is now subject to arrest under the Bail Act for failing to surrender to custody on 29 June 2012 for removal to Sweden.

Assange believes he had no choice but to seek asylum as Sweden declined to guarantee that he would not be extradited to the US to face espionage charges related to WikiLeaks if he travelled to Stockholm.

Ecuadorian officials reportedly considered smuggling Assange out of the embassy by disguising him in fancy dress, allowing him to hop across the Kensington rooftops to a helipad, or become lost in the crowds in Harrods, according to documents seen by the Ecuadorian news website Focus Ecuador and BuzzFeed UK.

Another possibility for getting Assange out was purportedly to appoint him Ecuadors representative to the UN and hustle him out in an official car under the protection of diplomatic immunity.

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