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Assange may be released
Peter Wilson, Europe correspondent
The Australian, December 09, 2010 12:00AM
JULIAN Assange has received a glimmer of hope in his battle against sexual abuse allegations.
A British judge says the WikiLeaks founder may be released from jail next week unless Swedish prosecutors produce evidence in London to back up their allegations.
Senior district judge Howard Riddle said Swedish authorities would need to show some convincing evidence if they wanted to oppose bail for the 39-year-old Australian when he appears in court next Tuesday to oppose extradition to Sweden.
Mr Assange was yesterday refused bail and sent to Wandsworth prison when he appeared before Judge Riddle to answer a Swedish extradition application.
The internet activist’s lawyers say if he stays in jail, it will be much harder for them to organise his defence against the Swedish sex charges and to stave off what they believe is a US government plan to charge him with espionage-related crimes over the publication of thousands of secret American cables.
Gemma Lindfield, the lawyer representing Swedish authorities at the initial extradition hearing in the City of Westminster Magistrates Court, said she believed the strength of the evidence over the sex charges was not relevant to the process of extraditing him under a European Arrest Warrant.
Judge Riddle disagreed, saying the four charges, including rape, were “extremely serious allegations (and) if they are false, he suffers a great injustice if he is remanded in custody”.
The judge said he would “suggest” to Ms Lindfield that “if she is going to oppose bail in future”, she would need to be armed with some substantial material to back up the allegations.
Mr Assange’s lawyers, including Australian human rights barrister Geoffrey Robertson QC, are worried that if, as seems likely, he is handed over to Swedish custody, the US government would then mount its own extradition case to try to prosecute him over the release of the cables on his website rather than his personal life.
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… really weird.
http://my.firedoglake.com/kirk…
http://www.counterpunch.org/sh…
There is a definite concern with respect to the last paragraph above:
OMG — This revelation is completely sickening (although it’s hard to be surprised by much of anything anymore) — how more base can we become?
Additional articles on the topic based on a cable from Wikileaksby Jason Linkins, Dec. 8th, 2010
“WikiLeaks: U.S. Military Contractors In Afghanistan Hired Child Prostitutes
WikiLeaks Reveals That Military Contractors Have Not Lost Their Taste For Child Prostitutes”
I was checking over my e-mails and there was one from Avaaz.org asking that we join in helping Assange. I had no sooner glanced at the content and the whole thing disappeared. I looked and looked for it. Fortunately, I remembered the name of Avaaz and I’ve found the page and information for joining in the fight for Assange:
Wikileaks: Stop the Crackdown!
may be refusing to cooperate…
http://www.crikey.com.au/2010/…
haysusfrigginkryst. Let’s just throw out the whole history of constitutional principles while we’re at it. The burden is on the accused? I guess with economic feudalism comes judicial feudalism.