easyt65
Diamond Member
- Aug 4, 2015
- 90,307
- 61,235
If Assange is booted from the Ecuadorean Embassy he is pretty much DONE. He will be arrested and most probably extradited to the US, placed in the hands of the Liberals / Democrats in charge who would lve to see him 'have an accident' after all the trouble he has put them through. If nothing else he will be jailed and never see the light of day again...and will never release any more information on the web again.
The Obama administration is probably placing a GREAT DEAL of political (economic, etc?) pressure on Ecuador to do just that - boot him out. It appears they have already talked them into cutting his internet privileges.
'Stand by.....'
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Mystery swirls around Assange's status at Ecuadorean Embassy
"WikiLeaks staffers Kristinn Hrafnsson and Sarah Harrison did not return repeated messages seeking comment. A woman who answered the phone at the embassy said she was not authorized to say anything. Ecuador's Foreign Minister Guillaume Long, approached by The Associated Press on the sidelines of a United Nations conference in Quito on Monday, declined to comment when asked about Assange. His office later released a terse statement in response to "the speculation of the last few hours" reaffirming Assange's asylum status and saying that "his protection by the Ecuadorean state will continue while the circumstances that led to the granting of asylum remain."
Weren't the 'conditions for seeking asylum' the rape charges filed against him? So....if the rape charges were suddenly to be dropped....would that 'change the conditions of his seeking asylum, potentially opening the door for Ecuador to ask him to leave...?
The Obama administration is probably placing a GREAT DEAL of political (economic, etc?) pressure on Ecuador to do just that - boot him out. It appears they have already talked them into cutting his internet privileges.
'Stand by.....'
------------------------
Mystery swirls around Assange's status at Ecuadorean Embassy
"WikiLeaks staffers Kristinn Hrafnsson and Sarah Harrison did not return repeated messages seeking comment. A woman who answered the phone at the embassy said she was not authorized to say anything. Ecuador's Foreign Minister Guillaume Long, approached by The Associated Press on the sidelines of a United Nations conference in Quito on Monday, declined to comment when asked about Assange. His office later released a terse statement in response to "the speculation of the last few hours" reaffirming Assange's asylum status and saying that "his protection by the Ecuadorean state will continue while the circumstances that led to the granting of asylum remain."
Weren't the 'conditions for seeking asylum' the rape charges filed against him? So....if the rape charges were suddenly to be dropped....would that 'change the conditions of his seeking asylum, potentially opening the door for Ecuador to ask him to leave...?