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Julian Assange News

John Pilger: Justice and freedom for Julian Assange mean free speech for us all

The Courage Foundation announces an urgent campaign to support Julian Assange and demand his freedom. Keep an eye on our liveblog for updates.

This month, it will be six years since Julian was forced to take refuge in the Ecuadorean embassy in London. He had been warned; the US Department of Justice was likely to file an application with Britain’s Home Office for his extradition to the United States. The allegations against Julian and WikiLeaks in the US were subsequently declared secret by a US District Court judge, but it has since been confirmed that a grand jury in Virginia has concocted a number of possible ‘charges’ against the WikiLeaks founder.

The most likely of these is ‘espionage’, which harks back to a long -defunct First World War law designed to punish conscientious objectors.

Julian is not an American; neither has he ‘betrayed’ any state. His ‘crime’ has been free journalism and publishing, which are protected under the US Constitution, a document whose sanctity has apparently been jettisoned.

WikiLeaks has done no more than the New York Times and the Washington Post in their celebrated past  –  it has revealed the truth about rapacious wars and the machinations of a corrupt elite. In response to this truth-telling,  a Cold War fantasy known as ‘Russiagate’ has attempted to paint Julian – and by extension all journalists  — as some ‘spies’.

What CNN and the rest of the media do not tell you is that the most senior of US intelligence have admitted under oath that their agencies have found not the slightest evidence to link Assange or WikiLeaks to Russia.

Julian’s status as a political refugee under the 1951 Convention has the backing of the United Nations, whose Working Party on Arbitrary Detentions has demanded an end to his persecution. The Working Party, one of the world’s highest authorities on international law, conducted an investigation in which the British Government took part, and found unanimously in Julian’s favour.

The UN calls on Britain to honour its responsibilities under the Convention and give Julian right of passage out of the embassy.

Although his health is suffering, Julian cannot go to a hospital for an X-ray as almost certainly he will be arrested.

Since Easter, Julian’s isolation has become extreme; according to Human Rights Watch, “His refuge in the embassy looks more and more like solitary confinement.”

He is denied basic communications; he is refused access to the phone and internet and visitors are forbidden. In forging a new, deferential relationship with the United States, President Lenin Moreno and the Ecuadorean government clearly aim to make life so difficult for Julian that he is silenced completely or he is forced to leave the embassy, into the waiting arms of the police.

A US extradition application is likely to follow and Julian will be destined for the kind of penal hell-hole that Chelsea Manning endured. The former president of Ecuador, Rafael Correa, whose government granted Julian political asylum, has condemned his treatment as ‘torture’.

We at Courage ask people to support vigils on June 19 — at the Ecuadorean Embassy in London, 6-8pm, info here, as well as the demonstration in Sydney, Australia on 17 June, at 1pm at Town Hall Square, info here.

John Pilger, Courage Trustee

 

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Chelsea Manning News

Military court rejects Chelsea Manning’s appeal

ACCA affirms Manning’s conviction and sentence – but the legal case doesn’t end here

The US Army Court of Criminal Appeals has upheld Chelsea Manning’s convictions and sentencing, in a 26-page ruling released this week. The ruling will not have come as a surprise to Chelsea’s lawyers, Vincent Ward and Nancy Hollander, who have indicated that the appeal will now go to the next stage, the Court of Appeals for the Armed Forces.

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Julian Assange News

Assange’s protection from US extradition “in jeopardy”

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Courage News Events News

Courage at RightsCon 2018

Going to the conference? Come find us!

This year’s RightsCon, a privacy rights conference bringing together activists, journalists, government representatives, and security researchers from around the world, will be held in Toronto, 16-18 May. Read more about the conference and its participants here.

Courage Director Naomi Colvin participated in a Pursuance Project panel, entitled “Effective 21st Century Organizing: Learning From the Past, Building the Future,” along with Barrett Brown, Jesselyn Radack, Thomas Drake, Diani Barreto, and Birgitta Jónsdóttir.

 

Watch the full panel video here.

Read more about Pursuance, Barrett Brown’s innovative software to crowdsource investigative journalism, here.

Watch Pursuance’s lead developer Steve Phillips give a tech demonstration of how Pursuance will work here.

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Courage News News

Announcing the all-new Courage Shop

Browse merchandise by category or by beneficiary, more products and designs coming soon!

Courage is excited to announce a completely revamped Courage Shop, currently featuring t-shirts and hoodies emblazoned with Courage’s logo as well as quotes and images of our beneficiaries. You can also find a link to Women, Whistleblowing, WikiLeaks (OR Books), a book-length conversation with Sarah Harrison, Renata Avila, and Angela Richter, the proceeds of which go to Courage.

Brow’s the shop’s inventory by filtering items by product type or by beneficiary. We’ll be adding new designs and products to the shop in the coming weeks, and we’ll announce those on Twitter and Facebook when we do. If you have a design or idea you’d like to submit, get in touch at our contact page here.

Browse the new shop here.

 

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Matt DeHart News

BOP rejects Matt DeHart’s appeal to reinstate time-served

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Legislation News

European Commission unveils draft whistleblower directive

Frans Timmermans and Věra Jourova present the European Commission’s proposal for EU-wide whistleblower protection

The European Commission has just published its long awaited draft whistleblower directive, which is the first step towards establishing a common standard for whistleblower protection across the EU.

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Julian Assange News

Fourth open letter to #ReconnectJulian published in Norway

Categories
Julian Assange News

Video: Vivienne Westwood calls on Ecuador to continue protecting Julian Assange

Courage Trustee and fashion icon Vivienne Westwood has recorded a video message in support of Julian Assange. Warning that “If Julian steps outside the Embassy the UK will arrest him,” Westwood says, “I appeal to the people of Ecuador to continue to protect Julian.”

See the video here (or on Youtube) and a full transcript below:

 

Transcript:

“Vivienne Playing Cards. Collect the Cards. Connect the Cards.

I just popped out of my studio near the river Thames into Battersea Park.

Julian Assange is America’s most wanted MAN because he helped to expose American War Crimes. He is a War Hero. For that they want to put him in concrete for 30 years. Julian knew this all along from various statements and emails. But now Trump has admitted it.

Yet Julian has never been charged with a crime. The Swedish allegations had no substance, that’s why they had to drop them.

The UK pretends that Julian jumped bail. This is not true. He’s been given political asylum by BRAVE Ecuador.

If Julian steps outside the Embassy the UK will arrest him. But I don’t think they want to extradite him to Trump. They don’t want to deal with him because he’s popular, despite the press. It’s more convenient for them to just leave him in limbo in the Embassy.

I’m standing on the steps of the Buddhist temple in the park. I’m a Taoist. But I believe that everyone keeps the message of Jesus in their heart – that we should love each another.

And I appeal to the people of Ecuador to continue to protect Julian.

Julian Assange is the most famous victim of human rights abuse in the western world and he is a famous beacon of free speech.

Wikileaks never lies.”

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Julian Assange News

Ex-CIA and Intelligence Officers Appeal to Ecuador in Support of Assange

CIA whistleblower and Courage Advisory Board member John Kiriakou hand-delivers letter to the Ecuadorian embassy in Washington DC

In the week since WikiLeaks’ publisher Julian Assange’s internet access was cut, along with his ability to receive visitors in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, there have been a number of initiatives to end his isolation and #ReconnectJulian. There’s been an open letter from artists, intellectuals and campaigners, another huge open letter signed by 338 intellectuals from the Spanish-speaking world and a petition that has gathered tens of thousands of signatures.

Now there has been a third open letter. CIA whistleblower and Courage Advisory Board member John Kirakou hand-delivered a letter today in support of Julian Assange to the Ecuadorian Ambassador to the United States.

Kiriakou was joined in his appeal by Philip Giraldi, a former CIA case officer, Elizabeth Murray, former Deputy National Intelligence Officer for the Near East, National Intelligence Council (retired) and twelve more former US government officials. Pink Floyd co-founder Roger Waters and Alex Cox, film director, writer, and producer also signed.

In the letter, the group applaud the Ecuadoran government’s decision to “grant asylum, to welcome as a citizen, and to grant diplomatic status to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange,” stating that the country has “been a role model for the international community for its views on transparency and press freedom.”

The group also raised the prospects of the confirmation of Gina Haspel as the new Direcor of the CIA as one of many examples why the world and especially America needs WikiLeaks and why Assange should be reconnected to the outside world:

It is because of Wikileaks that we know about the surveillance industry, about warrantless wiretapping and a great deal more about NSA spying on American citizens. And with President Trump’s appointment of the notorious Gina Haspel as the new CIA director, we know that there is a danger that the CIA will keep its torture history secret by keeping it classified.

The full letter and list of signatories follows below.

 

HE Ambassador Francisco Jose Borja Cevallos

Embassy of Ecuador

2535 15thStreet NW

Washington, DC 20009

Your Excellency:

We, the undersigned applaud and commend the decision of the Government of Ecuador to grant asylum, to welcome as a citizen, and to grant diplomatic status to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. In the case of Mr. Assange, Ecuador has been a role model for the international community for its views on transparency and press freedom. Every country should emulate Ecuador.

I am reminded of August 1990 when Iraqi troops invaded Kuwait. US President George H. W. Bush was unsure of what the US response should be. He received a call from British Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher. “Now is not the time to go wobbly, George,” she told him. Well, now is not the time to go wobbly in our support of Wikileaks and Julian Assange.

It is only because of Wikileaks that we know about war crimes and atrocities committed against Iraqi citizens by US troops. It is because of Wikileaks that we know about the surveillance industry, about warrantless wiretapping and a great deal more about NSA spying on American citizens. And with President Trump’s appointment of the notorious Gina Haspel as the new CIA director, we know that there is a danger that the CIA will keep its torture history secret by keeping it classified.

It is Wikileaks that has kept, and will continue to keep, all Americans informed of what their government does in their name. It is Julian Assange who has led that fight. We ask the Government of Ecuador to keep up the fight for transparency and press freedom, to continue to be a world leader in honesty and accountability. We call on the Government of Ecuador to reconnect Julian Assange to the world.

Respectfully,

John Kiriakou, former CIA counterterrorism officer and former senior investigator, US Senate Foreign Relations Committee

Marshall Carter-Tripp, Foreign Service Officer (retired)

Ann Wright, Colonel, US Army Reserve and Foreign Service Officer (retired)

Robert Wing, Foreign Service Officer (retired)

Philip Giraldi, former CIA case officer

Todd E. Pierce, Major, Judge Advocate, US Army (retired)

  1. J. Laniewski, Lieutenant Colonel, US Army (retired)

Coleen Rowley, retired FBI special agent and former Minneapolis Division

Legal Counsel

Elizabeth Murray, former Deputy National Intelligence Officer for the

Near East, National Intelligence Council (retired)

Peter Van Buren, Foreign Service Officer (retired)

  1. Kirk Wiebe, former senior intelligence analyst and whistleblower, NSA

Larry Johnson, former CIA officer and former Foreign Service officer

Bogdan Dzakovic, former team member, Federal Air Marshals and Aviation Security Red Team

Robert Wing, former Foreign Service Officer

Roger Waters, co-founder, Pink Floyd

Alex Cox, film director, writer, and producer