The War on WikiLeaks and Assange

Disir

Platinum Member
Sep 30, 2011
28,003
9,607
910
Helping government authorities discredit Julian Assange and destroy WikiLeaks, mainstream media outlets twisted a recent interview to make Assange look like a Donald Trump backer, write Randy Credico and Dennis J Bernstein.


By Randy Credico and Dennis J Bernstein

Italian journalist Stefania Maurizi, who now reports for La Repubblica and has worked on WikiLeaks’ releases of secret documents, complains that her recent interview with Julian Assange was distorted by the Guardian, the Washington Post and others to assign Assange a pro-Trump agenda.

The Guardian recently “amended” its reporting on her interview with Assange, but for the feisty, seasoned reporter it wasn’t nearly enough. “I appreciate the Guardian amending the article, but at the same time the damage is done and I’m not convinced it was a solution,” she said.

Maurizi is going to court in September in Great Britain to fight for the release of key documents that related directly to the process of Assange’s treatment and his pursuit by various governments collaborating to shut his operations down.

“This is the first time that a reporter has tried to get access to these files,” she said in a rare interview on Aug. 1, “which tells you something about the state of journalism these days.”

Before joining la Repubblica, Maurizi spent ten years working for the Italian newsmagazine l’Espresso. Maurizi also partnered with Glenn Greenwald to reveal the Edward Snowden files as they pertain to Italy. She is author most recently of Dossier WikiLeaks.

Dennis Bernstein: Tell us about your multiple struggles to get key documents that will shed light on the entire Assange affair.

Stefania Maurizi: I have spent the past two years struggling to access the documents on the Julian Assange case. I was finally forced to go to court and sue the UK government to get them to hand over the documents. This is the first time that a reporter has tried to get access to these files, which tells you something about the state of journalism these days.

Dozens of newspapers have talked with Assange over the past ten years and yet no one has attempted to get full access to these documents about the case. Here we have a high-profile publisher who is being arbitrarily detained by two of the most respected Western democracies, Sweden and the United Kingdom, and no one is trying to get to these documents. It is incredible to me.

Randy Credico: Are any newspapers in London writing amicus briefs on your behalf?

SM: Honestly, I don’t know. I can imagine there is some embarrassment about the fact that no newspaper has yet asked for these documents.

DB: What kinds of information do you expect to be in these documents? What could be the case in terms of freeing Julian Assange?

SM: First of all, I want to access the full correspondence between the UK authorities and the Swedish prosecutors. In 2015 I filed a Freedom of Information Act request and I obtained some documents from the Swedish authorities which made very clear that the UK put pressure on the Swedish authorities not to question Mr. Assange in London, which he and his lawyers had requested, but rather to extradite him to Sweden. This is why we have been in this legal quagmire for five years now with Julian stuck in arbitrary detention at the Ecuadorian embassy.
The War on WikiLeaks and Assange

It was a lot too late which the Guardian knew.
 
Assange is not some libertarian euroweenie who loves America. He is a leftist, and opposed American foreign policy of intervention.

He only exposed the DNC because they screwed Bernie supporters.

That is really the central issue, but the media and DNC manipulated the narrative. Instead it's all about some conspiracy there is no evidence of.

 
Assange is a great study about how a totalitarian government develops its apparatchiks and methods. He is the target and as long as he is protected, we can study the behavior of consolidating governments.
 
Ecuador withdraws Julian Assange’s asylum status...SUCH A ROGUE NATION is EQUADOR with a shady government playing into the worst attributes of the United States government.
 
181116_wn_pannel_hpMain_1x1_240.jpg
images.jpg
 
Last edited:
June 11 2019 The Guardian
Julian Assange: US charges expected to be revealed at hearing

WikiLeaks editor-in-chief says US will present evidence in support of extradition request

Agence France-Presse

Tue 11 Jun 2019 12.06 EDT Last modified on Tue 11 Jun 2019 14.50 ED

The US will detail all the charges against the WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, when it seeks his extradition in a London court, the editor-in-chief of the whistleblowing website has said.

“The American authorities, the Department of Justice, will present the evidence in support of their extradition demand,” Kristinn Hrafnsson said.

The US justice department confirmed on Tuesday it had submitted a formal extradition request. The 47-year-old Australian is not expected to attend Friday’s hearing but could take part from prison via video-link, although it will be largely procedural.

The “first real confrontation of arguments” in court will not be for several weeks or months, Hrafnsson said.

He was arrested by British police in April after Ecuador finally withdrew his asylum and is now serving a 50-week prison sentence for violating his bail conditions.

The US has accused Assange of violating the US Espionage Act by publishing military and diplomatic files in 2010. The 18 charges against Assange reject his claim he was simply a publisher receiving leaked material, which would be protected under press freedom legislation.

Hrafnsson said the charges were “very revealing about the nature of this entire case”. He said the Espionage Act was part of an “archaic legal framework ... and has never been used against a publisher and a journalist”.

“It’s an indication of the watershed moment that we are now seeing in the attack on journalism,” he said.

Assange is being detained at Belmarsh high-security prison in London, where he has been transferred to a medical unit due to concerns about his health.
 
Last edited:
RSF in English‏Verified account @RSF_en
USA
Pentagon goes one year without a televised press briefing Investigative journalism in danger

AUSTRALIA

Australia has good public media but the concentration of media ownership is one of the highest in the world. It became even more concentrated in July 2018, when Nine Entertainment took over the Fairfax media group.

SYDNEY MORNING HERALD

Raids ignite a firestorm that's here to stay https://www.smh.com.au/politics/fed...torm-that-s-here-to-stay-20190612-p51wzo.html via @smh
CHINA
China's leading investigative reporter says he can't work there any more
The departure of Liu Wanyong represents the end of investigative journalism in China under the pressure of Communist Party orthodoxy
News of two foreign journalists missing in Saudi Arabia
May 20, 2019
 
Last edited:

Forum List

Back
Top