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struggle4progress

struggle4progress's Journal
struggle4progress's Journal
August 9, 2012

Wikileaks and Money

By now, quite a few people have some doubts about money and Wikileaks

An early doubter was John Young, who runs a document-leak website called Cryptome. The Wikileaks domain was originally registered under Young's name. Young says that he quickly resigned from the organization due to their obsession with money. In particular, Young has wondered about money raised by Wikileaks for Bradley Manning's defense

The Manning defense question is interesting. Wikileaks seems to have originally promised to pay half of Coombs flat $100K fee to defend Manning. And at one time, as Wikileaks announcied they had already pulled in a million dollars in donations, Assange was stumping for another $200K for Manning's defense. But by December 2010, Wikileaks was in the news for not providing promised funds for Manning. Wikileaks then promised to deliver $20K for Manning (somewhat less than the $50K expected). In the end, they actually delivered only $15K. Wikileaks also promised to a complete and transparent accounting of their funds by the end of 2010: the report, which finally appeared in April 2011, indicated that Wikileaks had taken at least $1.9 million in 2010 but provided less information than originally promised, by not revealing how much was paid to Assange, for example

The question simply must be asked: if we doesn't really know much about who runs Wikileaks and the standards by which Wikileaks is run, why should we trust them to handle money and disclosed documents appropriately? And the behavior of the organization, in this respect, has raised eyebrows for some time. In 2008, Wikileaks attempted to auction off 7,000 emails from the Venezuela's ambassador in Argentina. That's hard to reconcile with the idea that Wikileaks is a public-interest nonprofit, supported by donations and dedicated to the free flow of information. Perhaps we ought to be willing to entertain nasty suspicions about Wikileaks. The case of the Venezuelan ambassador's emails might suggest (say) that Wikileaks would like to reposition itself as yet another private intelligence agency -- or even that it imagines it can find economic opportunities by skating along the grey edges of blackmail

Such organizational history might help interpret the curious Belarusian affair, involving a holocaust-denier, who uses various names such as "Israel Shamir" and who has been a Wikileaks agent in Russia (while his son served as a Wikileaks agent in Sweden). Shortly after "Israel Shamir" met with Belarusian officials, the state newspaper announced that it would be publishing documents about the Belarusian opposition. Because further information is not readily available, we can merely wonder: what are the actual limits of Assange's willingness to sell information to the highest bidder?

The possibility -- that Wikileaks might be providing repressive regimes with the names of dissidents or might be informing paramilitary groups which civilians oppose them -- remains. In the case of the Afghan material, Wikileaks released unredacted material with a search tool that could (for example) help the Taliban find opponents by name. For the cables, the issue could be regarded as moot, because the entire unredacted collection of diplomatic cables became available after both the encrypted file and password separately leaked. Several human rights organizations eventually complained in writing to Wikileaks about the critical need for redaction. The characteristic Wikileaks' response has been to use the issue for publicity and fundraising. The organization made a great show of asking the Pentagon to help redact the Afghan war materials; the Pentagon, of course, had no interest in cooperating with Wikileaks. So next Wikileaks complained it needed $700K for "harm-minimization review" and that neither the Pentagon nor Amnesty International would help

... WikiLeaks ... was registered under the names of ... John Shipton ... and ... John Young, ... who ran the intelligence leak website Cryptome, which could be seen as WikiLeaks’ predecessor ...
The Cypherpunk Revolutionary: Julian Assange
Robert Manne
The Monthly | The Monthly Essays | March 2011
http://www.themonthly.com.au/julian-assange-cypherpunk-revolutionary-robert-manne-3081

John Young..., a 74-year-old architect who lives in Manhattan, publishes a document-leaking Web site called Cryptome.org that predates Wikileaks by over a decade ... Operating a Web site to post leaked documents isn't very expensive (Young estimates he spends a little over $100 a month for Cryptome's server space). So when other Wikileaks founders started to talk about the need to raise $5 million and complained that an initial round of publicity had affected "our delicate negotiations with the Open Society Institute and other funding bodies," Young says, he resigned from the effort ... Young has been trying to trace Wikileaks' money flows. On July 17 <2010>, Wikileaks asked supporters for $200,000 to pay for Mannings' attorneys, even though co-founder Julian Assange said a few days earlier that the organization had already raised $1 million ...
Wikileaks' estranged co-founder becomes a critic (Q&A)
John Young, editor of document-leaking site Cryptome.org, has switched from being one of Wikileaks biggest fans to one of its prominent critics.
by Declan McCullagh
July 20, 2010 1:40 PM PDT
http://news.cnet.com/8301-31921_3-20011106-281.html

... Another of WikiLeaks' early leaders said Assange's goal from the beginning was to make a lot of money and seek personal fame. "No question," said John Young. "All the signs are there. It's a well-known aspect of underground hacking. Much money to be made here" ... Young said Assange had always hoped to be put behind bars, as a way to further establish his fame, like a marketing tool. Said Young, "He was trained as an actor and he has a wonderful speaking voice. He works on his appearance, he works on his slow speaking thing. He loves to provoke people, he loves to make dramatic statements. He loves to be thrown in jail. He'll love to have a show trial" ...
Former Friends Ask WikiLeaks Founder: Where's the Money?
By BRIAN ROSS (@brianross) , AVNI PATEL, MATTHEW COLE and RHONDA SCHWARTZ
Dec. 15, 2010
http://abcnews.go.com/Blotter/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-money/story?id=12394736

WikiLeaks is threatening to take legal action against a former employee whose book chronicling his time with the organisation characterises its founder, Julian Assange, as obsessed by power and money and with a fondness for young women ...
WikiLeaks threatens legal action against Daniel Domscheit-Berg
Julian Assange characterised as being obsessed by power in former WikiLeaks employee's account of his time with website

Peter Walker
Thursday 10 February 2011 07.54 EST
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/feb/10/wikileaks-legal-action-daniel-domscheit-berg

... The report, if complete, should also detail what money WikiLeaks has paid out to date for the defense fund of Army Pfc. Bradley Manning ... Courage to Resist director Jeff Paterson said Manning's legal defense was expected to cost about $100,000 and WikiLeaks was expected to cover "about half" ... Julian Assange ... recently declined to publicly comment on any payment for Manning's defense, despite soliciting donations for the cause. Assange said ... his group had been advised not to talk about it ...
WikiLeaks salaries to be revealed in new report
By Kim Zetter, WIRED
December 2, 2010 4:42 p.m. EST
http://www.cnn.com/2010/TECH/web/12/02/salaries.wikileaks.wired/index.html

... According to Paterson, Courage to Resist corresponded with WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange in July and on subsequent occasions confirming that WikiLeaks would cover about half of the expected fees, or $50,000, for Manning's defense. On its Twitter page, WikiLeaks frequently solicited donations for the defense fund through a German charity, the Wau Holland Foundation ... Foundation Vice President Hendrik Fulda said it was his understanding that 15,000 euros, about $20,000, would be set aside for the defense fund but he still needed to confirm that with WikiLeaks ...
WikiLeaks hasn't fulfilled financial-aid pledge for suspect in leaks, group says
By Ellen Nakashima
Washington Post Staff Writer
Tuesday, December 7, 2010; 10:36 PM
http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/content/article/2010/12/07/AR2010120704817.html?sid=ST2010120701470

... A spokesman for the Bradley Manning Support Network said Wednesday that the group had still not received money that WikiLeaks pledged in July and was supposed to release to the group back in September ... WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said last week at a panel discussion in London that WikiLeaks had contributed “a substantial amount of money” to Manning’s defense. But upon learning Tuesday that the money had actually not been paid yet, Hrafnsson told The Washington Post that there was a misunderstanding and that $20,000 would be distributed to Manning’s defense immediately by the nonprofit Wau Holland Foundation, which manages the majority of WikiLeaks donations ... The figure, however, falls short of the $50,000 that the Bradley Manning Support Network was expecting from WikiLeaks. Manning’s defense attorney, David E. Coombs, has agreed to defend the soldier for a flat fee of $100,000, and WikiLeaks was expected to pay half of this, Paterson said ...
WikiLeaks’ Cash Pledge Hasn’t Reached Bradley Manning’s Support Fund
By Kim Zetter
12.08.10
http://m.wired.com/threatlevel/2010/12/manning-defens/

WikiLeaks has finally made good on a months-old pledge to contribute financially to the defense of 23-year-old Bradley Manning, according to a group raising money for the imprisoned Army private suspected of providing WikiLeaks its most important U.S. releases. But the sum, $15,100, is less than half the $50,000 WikiLeaks originally promised. It’s also less than the group pledged in December, when WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said WikiLeaks would immediately transfer $20,000 to Manning’s defense fund ...
WikiLeaks Contributes $15,000 to Bradley Manning’s Defense
By Kim Zetter
01.13.11
http://m.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/01/manning-donations/

... In August 2008, to sustain Assange's press-release theory, Wikileaks tried to auction a leak containing over 7,000 emails from the Venezuelan ambassador to Argentina, Freddy Balzan ... The venture failed ... "There were then 50 stories about the fact we were auctioning the material," says Assange. "But none about the Venezuelan documents in hand" ...
Exposed: Wikileaks' secrets
By Annabel Symington
01 September 09
http://www.wired.co.uk/magazine/archive/2009/10/start/exposed-wikileaks-secrets?page=all

A German nonprofit that processes most of the donations submitted to the secret-spilling site WikiLeaks has finally made good on a nearly year-old promise to release a report detailing how those donations are spent — though the report remains silent on how much money was paid to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange ... According to the report, the foundation received about $1.9 million on behalf of WikiLeaks in 2010. More than half ... came in November and December, after WikiLeaks and several newspapers began publishing a trove of U.S. diplomatic cables allegedly received from Army intelligence analyst Bradley Manning. A $15,100 contribution WikiLeaks made to Manning’s defense in January of this year is not reflected in the report, which only covers expenses and contributions through December of 2010 ...
WikiLeaks Donations Topped $1.9 Million in 2010
By Kim Zetter
04.26.11
http://m.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/04/wau-holland-report/

... Let's put it this way: some diplomatic cables from United States embassies will have concerned American interventions on behalf of dissidents in authoritarian countries. Release of such cables would endanger any future such American intervention, since authoritarian governments would fear that concessions to secret American requests would eventually embarrass them if the requests were made public. They might endanger the dissidents themselves, or their families ... What is the basis for those editorial decisions? Who makes them? ... WikiLeaks ... like other human-rights and humanitarian organisations ... needs to lay down some clear, public ethical guidelines about how and why it does what it does. And it needs to bring in a board of directors of people from a wide range of countries, backgrounds and institutions to review the organisation's conduct on ethical and other grounds. For example, here's Human Rights Watch's board of directors. HRW deals with information that's every bit as secret and potentially damaging as the material WikiLeaks gets. But I trust the way they handle it, in part because I know who they are. Who's WikiLeaks? Besides Mr Assange, I don't know, and they're not really telling ...
Releasing, reporting, or dumping?
Nov 30th 2010, 15:50 by M.S.
http://www.economist.com/blogs/democracyinamerica/2010/11/wikileaks_0

It has been reported that an “accredited” journalist for Wikileaks, Israel Shamir, met with Uladzimri Makei, the Head of the Presidential administration in Belarus. Subsequently, it was reported in the Belarus Telegraf that a state newspaper would be publishing documents about the Belarusian opposition ...
Wikileaks, Belarus, and Israel Shamir
05 Feb 2011
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2011/02/wikileaks-belarus-and-israel-shamir/

... The KLE reports, organised into 16 easily searchable pages by WikiLeaks volunteers, allow anyone with an internet connection to browse six years’ worth of minutely detailed individual acts of co-operation, or what the Taliban would call ‘collaboration’, with no names or other details redacted. The potentially herculean task of trawling through the main archive is made infinitely easier by a convenient browse function ... The risk to the security of the Afghans named in the documents ... was beyond dispute ...
The Man Who Fell to Earth: Julian Assange’s WikiLeaks
John Birmingham
The Monthly | The Monthly Essays | October 2010
http://www.themonthly.com.au/julian-assange-s-wikileaks-man-who-fell-earth-john-birmingham-2789

... The uncensored cables are contained in a 1.73-GB password-protected file named “cables.csv,” which is reportedly circulating somewhere on the internet, according to Steffen Kraft, editor of the German paper Der Freitag. Kraft announced last week that his paper had found the file, and easily obtained the password to unlock it ... “The story is that a series of lapses, as far as I can see on behalf of WikiLeaks and its affiliates, has led to the possibility a file becoming generally available which it never should have been available,” confirmed former WikiLeaks staffer Herbert Snorrason, of Iceland, who left the organization as part of a staff revolt last year ... “The issue is double: On one hand there is the availability of the encrypted file, and on the other the release of the password to the encrypted file,” Snorrason told Threat Level on Monday. “And those two publications happened separately” ...
WikiLeaks Springs a Leak: Full Database of Diplomatic Cables Appears Online
By Kim Zetter and Kevin Poulsen
08.29.11
http://m.wired.com/threatlevel/2011/08/wikileaks-leak/

... In a statement Thursday, the newspaper said: "The Guardian was told that the file to which it was given access in July 2010 would only be on a secure server for a few hours and then taken off. It appears that two versions of this file were subsequently posted to a peer-to-peer file sharing network using the same password." The newspaper said one version of the file was posted by WikiLeaks on December 7 last year, just hours before the site's founder Julian Assange was arrested in London on an extradition request from Sweden where he is wanted for questioning over alleged sexual assault. But the newspaper added: "The unencrypted version of the cables published on the web... (on Wednesday) was not the one accessed by the Guardian last year" ...
Sep, 2011, 07.36PM IST, AFP
British newspaper Guardian hits back in WikiLeaks row on password leak of US diplomatic cables
http://economictimes.indiatimes.com/news/politics/nation/british-newspaper-guardian-hits-back-in-wikileaks-row-on-password-leak-of-us-diplomatic-cables/articleshow/9824960.cms

... “We deplore the decision of WikiLeaks to publish the unredacted State Department cables, which may put sources at risk,” it reads. “Our previous dealings with WikiLeaks were on the clear basis that we would only publish cables which had been subjected to a thorough editing and clearance process. We will continue to defend our collaborative publishing endeavor" ... WikiLeaks published the entire cache after polling its readers on Twitter. It did not disclose how many of its more than one million followers had voted in favor of releasing the unredacted documents and how many had voted against ...
WikiLeaks Publishes Full Catalog of U.S. Cables With Names of Sources
By Leslie Horn
September 2, 2011 10:04am EST
http://www.pcmag.com/article2/0,2817,2392345,00.asp

... Organisations including Amnesty International wrote to the site's spokesman Julian Assange urging better redaction of Secret files, both already public and planned to be released, according to the Wall Street Journal ... "We strongly urge your volunteers and staff to analyse all documents to ensure that those containing identifying information are taken down or redacted" ... Following the exchange, yesterday a message was posted on Wikileaks' Twitter feed saying the site, which claims it has 800 volunteers, needs $700,000 to conduct a "harm-minimization review". A later post added: "Pentagon wants to bankrupt us by refusing to assist review. Media won't take responsibility. Amnesty won't. What to do?" ...
Wikileaks falls out with human rights groups
Exposing Taliban informants not cool, says Amnesty
By Christopher Williams
10th August 2010 11:01 GMT
www.theregister.co.uk/2010/08/10/wikileaks_amnesty/

... Assange told the wire service that the Department of Defense had responded to the WikiLeaks request. According to the wire service, he said "the Pentagon has expressed willingness to discuss the online whistleblower's request for help in reviewing classified documents from the Afghan war and removing information that could harm civilians." A more-recent AP story tells a different story: "The Pentagon is denying it had direct contact with WikiLeaks and says the military is not interested in helping the website review classified war documents to post online" ...
Pentagon Says It Will Not Cooperate With WikiLeaks Request For Help, AP Reports
02:22 pm
August 18, 2010
by David Gura
http://www.npr.org/blogs/thetwo-way/2010/08/18/129279469/pentagon-says-it-will-not-cooperate-with-wikileaks-ap-reports

The Pentagon has contacted a lawyer purporting to represent WikiLeaks but said it would not negotiate a "sanitised" release of a huge cache of classified documents held by the whistleblower's website, a letter released on Wednesday shows ... Jeh Charles Johnson, the Defense Department general counsel, sent the letter dated August 16 to a post office box in Hattiesburg, Mississippi in the name of Timothy J Matusheski ... "Thus, the Department of Defense will not negotiate some 'minimised' or 'sanitised' version of a release by WikiLeaks of additional US government classified documents. The Department demands that nothing further be released by WikiLeaks," the letter said ...
US rejects 'sanitised' WikiLeaks release
August 19, 2010
Karl Ritter
AP
http://news.theage.com.au/breaking-news-world/us-rejects-sanitised-wikileaks-release-20100819-12fdr.html

August 7, 2012

Bodyguard fears Assange may face death

7 August, 2012 12:41PM AEST
By Samantha Turnbull
One of Julian Assange's bodyguards recently visited Lismore where he spoke to ABC North Coast

... He was imprisoned for 13 months during the first Gulf War for disarming a B-52 bomber in New York State and upon his return to Australia he disabled uranium mining machinery in the Northern Territory ...

"I think it's different for an Australian in trouble for drugs in Thailand or Bali, but if you're in trouble with the United States for political reasons the Australian Government are just going to serve you up," said Mr O'Reilly ...

"The English won't extradite for death penalty offences and the Swedes will," he said.

"So if he went from England they couldn't execute him" ...

http://www.abc.net.au/local/stories/2012/08/07/3562410.htm



It's an interesting article about an interesting character -- but, once again, as has become so common in the parallel-universe of Assange-supporters, certain claims presented as "facts" are not actually facts; and in this case, we should mention in particular Mr O'Reilly's death penalty claims. In fact, it has been somewhat over a century since the last execution in Sweden, and Sweden's extradition law, barring extradition unless capital punishment is ruled out, has been in place for decades

Here's a pdf link to Sweden's EXTRADITION FOR CRIMINAL OFFENCES ACT

http://www.sweden.gov.se/content/1/c6/03/79/09/f391f7b5.pdf

Look at Section 12:

... When extradition is granted the following conditions, when applicable, shall be prescribed: ...

3. A person who is extradited may not have the death penalty imposed for the offence ...

The Government shall otherwise prescribe such conditions as are considered necessary ...

August 6, 2012

... Mr Assange regards himself as a victim of radicalism. "Sweden is the Saudi Arabia of feminism,"

he said. "I fell into a hornets' nest of revolutionary feminism" ...

WikiLeaks founder baffled by sex assault claims
BY: MARIE COLVIN
From: The Sunday Times December 27, 2010 12:00AM
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/wikileaks-founder-baffled-by-sex-assault-claims/story-fn775xjq-1225976459286



So there is Truth as we knew it in late 2010: dear, dear Julian victimized by radical feminists. Later, Assange's defense team was actually able to exhibit witnesses who had heard rumors that the Swedish prosecutor was prejudiced against men!

The prosecutor leading the rape and sexual assault case against Julian Assange is a "malicious" radical feminist who is "biased against men", a retired senior Swedish judge has told the hearing into Assange's extradition to Sweden. In caustic evidence on the first day of the two-day hearing, Brita Sundberg-Weitman, a former appeal court judge, told Belmarsh magistrates court that Sweden's chief prosecutor, Marianne Ny, who is seeking the WikiLeaks founder's extradition, "has a rather biased view against men". "I can't understand her attitude here. It looks malicious," she said ... Under cross-examination by Clare Montgomery QC, for the Swedish government, however, Sundberg-Weitman admitted she had no personal knowledge of the conduct of the prosecutor in the case, basing her views instead on what she had been told ...

Julian Assange 'would face bias in Sweden', retired judge says
Sundberg-Weitman accuses Swedish prosecutor of being 'malicious', but admits she has no personal knowledge of her
Esther Addley
Monday 7 February 2011 14.41 EST
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2011/feb/07/julian-assange-prosecutor



And what else could account for the rape accusation? Assange's lawyers did try hard to explain in the UK courts, that having sex with a woman who is unconscious should not be considered rape, but the magistrate corruptly refused to agree:

... The position with offence 4 is different. This is an allegation of rape. The framework list is ticked for rape. The defence accepts that normally the ticking of a framework list offence box on an EAW would require very little analysis by the court. However they then developed a sophisticated argument that the conduct alleged here would not amount to rape in most European countries. However, what is alleged here is that Mr Assange “deliberately consummated sexual intercourse with her by improperly exploiting that she, due to sleep, was in a helpless state”. In this country that would amount to rape ...

City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court (Sitting at Belmarsh Magistrates’ Court)
The judicial authority in Sweden -v- Julian Paul Assange
Findings of facts and reasons




This all clearly proves CIA involvement, as helpfully pointed out by Israel Shamir in Counterpunch:

... One accuser, Anna Ardin, may have “ties to the US-financed anti-Castro and anti-communist groups,” according to Israel Shamir and Paul Bennett, writing for CounterPunch. While in Cuba, Ardin worked with the Las damas de blanco (the Ladies in White), a feminist anti-Castro group. Professor Michael Seltzer pointed out that the group is led by Carlos Alberto Montaner who is reportedly connected to the CIA ... Shamir and Bennett noted that Las damas de blanco is partially funded by the US government and also counts Luis Posada Carriles as a supporter ...

Revealed: Assange ‘rape’ accuser linked to notorious CIA operative
By David Edwards
Monday, December 6, 2010 15:43 EDT
http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2010/12/06/assange-rape-accuser-cia-ties/



That should, of course, clinch the matter: one of Assange's accusers allegedly once met some anti-Castro feminists who are led by some guy reportedly connected to the CIA, and some other CIA guy agrees with what those anti-Castro feminists are doing! So it's a honey trap, involving the revolutionary feminists of the CIA! But since some people are cynical, let us carefully lay out the impeccable credentials of Israel Shamir:

In an interview with a Swedish Holocaust-denying creationist and Islamist named Mohamed Omar, headlined "The Holocaust is an idol", Shamir says: "Antisemitism is an invented concept without any real meaning. I don't believe antisemitism exists at all ..."

His latest book, in Russian, is called is called How to Break the Conspiracy of the Elders of Zion.

His son, Wahlström, ... has been employed in various journalistic capacities by the Swedish state broadcaster, SVT, by the newspaper Aftonbladet, and by the leftwing magazine Ordfront. The magazine was forced to retract and to apologise for a story he wrote in 2005 about supposed Israeli control of the Swedish media, which contained quotes attributed to three other journalists, which they denied ever making. None the less, Aftonbladet is paying him both as a researcher and a consultant, because he has exclusive access to the WikiLeaks cable dump in Sweden and is the gatekeeper who doles out stories to favoured media partners ...

<Shamir> also denied that he had any special connection with WikiLeaks, though the group's spokesman, Kristinn Hrafnsson, confirmed that he was their representative in Russia, just as his son is in Scandinavia. Expressen also published a photograph of him standing behind Julian Assange at a computer, published in the Russian paper, which has been reprinting the WikiLeaks cables he passed to them ...

WikiLeaks and Israel Shamir
WikiLeaks is represented in Russia and Scandinavia by a father and son team with a disturbing record of antisemitism

Comment is free > Andrew Brown's blog
<17 December 2010>
http://www.guardian.co.uk/commentisfree/andrewbrown/2010/dec/17/wikileaks-israel-shamir-russia-scandinavia



In that article, Andrew Brown goes on to wring his hands and suggest that, because of Shamir's questionable background, we should be concerned for anybody named in the cables. And in fact, not long afterwards, Shamir apparently met with the authorities in Belarus, after which the state newspaper announced it was planning to publish documents related to the Belarusian opposition!

It has been reported that an “accredited” journalist for Wikileaks, Israel Shamir, met with Uladzimri Makei, the Head of the Presidential administration in Belarus. Subsequently, it was reported in the Belarus Telegraf that a state newspaper would be publishing documents about the Belarusian opposition.

Wikileaks has always maintained it takes care to ensure that names of political activists are redacted from cables before publication on its website. Index on Censorship is concerned that some of the Wikileaks cables relating to Belarus that have not appeared on the main Wikileaks website are now in the public domain.

There are various “commercial crimes” in Belarus that make it a criminal offence to run an unregistered organisation. In turn, many NGOs are prohibited from registering their organisations. This places a lot of civil society in Belarus in a legal grey area which can mean political activists, who cannot register, are placed in breach of the law for accepting foreign funding. It is rumoured in Belarus that many of the Wikileaks cables outline foreign support for opposition groups. Our worry is that this information could be used to prosecute some of the political prisoners currently held by the KGB.

In the immediate aftermath of the discredited Belarusian elections, Index on Censorship made repeated attempts to contact Wikileaks in order for them to clarify its relationship with Shamir ...

WIKILEAKS, BELARUS AND ISRAEL SHAMIR
05 Feb 2011
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2011/02/wikileaks-belarus-and-israel-shamir/



We must open our eyes, because radical feminist CIA agents are obviously everywhere! They have tried to discredit dear Julian, and now they are trying to discredit Julian's friends, like Israel Shamir!

August 5, 2012

How Wikileaks lost the support of the free speech advocate Index on Censorship

DOHA: Top officials in several Arab countries have close links with the CIA, and many officials keep visiting US embassies in their respective countries voluntarily to establish links with this key US intelligence agency, says Julian Assange, founder of the whistle-blowing website, WikiLeaks.

“These officials are spies for the US in their countries,” Assange told Al Jazeera Arabic channel in an interview yesterday.

The interviewer, Ahmed Mansour, said at the start of the interview which was a continuation of last week’s interface, that Assange had even shown him the files that contained the names of some top Arab officials with alleged links with the CIA.

Assange or Mansour, however, didn’t disclose the names of these officials. The WikiLeaks founder said he feared he could be killed but added that there were 2,000 websites that were ready to publish the remaining files that are in possession of WikiLeaks after “he has been done away with” ...

Many Arab officials have close CIA links: Assange
Thursday, 30 December 2010 03:10
By MOBIN PANDIT & AHMED EL AMIN
http://www.thepeninsulaqatar.com/qatar/137385-many-arab-officials-have-close-cia-links-assange-.html




... The embassy attache was adamant. It was only a matter of time before a human rights defender was exposed by WikiLeaks, and jailed or killed as a result. “Then in that case,” he said grimly, “you may ask Mr Assange exactly what he thinks he has done for ‘transparency and human rights’”.

Weirdly, almost on cue, Wikileaks released a cable that might have proven his point, in which the name of the source — a public critic of a particularly reprehensible head of state — was redacted by WikiLeaks. However the redactor, presumably unfamiliar with the dissident’s work, failed to recognise a giveaway clue cited in the cable’s title ...

Redaction of data was never meant to be WikiLeaks’ prime duty, so it should be no surprise that they do it unwillingly, and when they do, that they can do it badly or obscurely. Index on Censorship raised the issue of the giveaway clue in the title of the otherwise redacted leaked cable with WikiLeaks directly.

They replied sympathetically, but noted that the redacted name was already out there as author of a critical book about the head of state. “…(S)o we feel that too much redaction is futile,” said the reply. “However, we do feel it is better to be safe than sorry and so have redacted the title …” ...

FRESH EYES NEEDED ON WIKILEAKS’ TREASURE TROVE OF SECRETS
31 Dec 2010
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2010/12/fresh-eyes-needed-on-wikileaks-treasure-trove-of-secrets/




... Index’s association with Assange goes back some time ... We were pleased to host him in a debate in London last September, but his combative demeanour that evening was a surprise ... Two of Index’s trustees are Assange’s lawyer, Mark Stephens and his agent, Caroline Michel ...

It has often felt like treading on egg shells. We were asked in December to channel Assange’s defence fund through our bank account. Our chairman, the broadcaster Jonathan Dimbleby, and I thought it inappropriate for a charity to become involved in the personal allegations against Assange. So we declined.

When urged at the start of January by Assange’s publisher to help him write his memoirs I said I was ready to assist, but only if I had strong editorial input and that no subject was off-limits. This, I was told, was not acceptable. Roughly at the same time our organisation started asking questions about Israel Shamir, a man accused of Holocaust denial and of being a close associate of Belarus’s autocratic leader Alexander Lukashenko. Index is one of the founders of the Belarus Committee. Despite repeated but polite requests to WikiLeaks, our team was stonewalled, so we went public with our concerns.

Assange’s reported conspiracy remarks to Private Eye magazine about me and senior figures in the Guardian do not help his cause. With so many genuine adversaries, why seek more? His approach has reinforced a view that whistleblowing is the preserve of irresponsible eccentrics ...

JULIAN ASSANGE AND THE BIG PICTURE
03 Mar11 – 10:07 am
by John Kampfner
http://blog.indexoncensorship.org/2011/03/03/julian-assange-and-the-big-picture/




It has been reported that an “accredited” journalist for Wikileaks, Israel Shamir, met with Uladzimri Makei, the Head of the Presidential administration in Belarus. Subsequently, it was reported in the Belarus Telegraf that a state newspaper would be publishing documents about the Belarusian opposition.

Wikileaks has always maintained it takes care to ensure that names of political activists are redacted from cables before publication on its website. Index on Censorship is concerned that some of the Wikileaks cables relating to Belarus that have not appeared on the main Wikileaks website are now in the public domain.

There are various “commercial crimes” in Belarus that make it a criminal offence to run an unregistered organisation. In turn, many NGOs are prohibited from registering their organisations. This places a lot of civil society in Belarus in a legal grey area which can mean political activists, who cannot register, are placed in breach of the law for accepting foreign funding. It is rumoured in Belarus that many of the Wikileaks cables outline foreign support for opposition groups. Our worry is that this information could be used to prosecute some of the political prisoners currently held by the KGB.

In the immediate aftermath of the discredited Belarusian elections, Index on Censorship made repeated attempts to contact Wikileaks in order for them to clarify its relationship with Shamir ...

WIKILEAKS, BELARUS AND ISRAEL SHAMIR
05 Feb 2011
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2011/02/wikileaks-belarus-and-israel-shamir/




Index on Censorship regrets the publication of over 250,000 unredacted US embassy cables by whistleblower site Wikileaks.

While Index supports the principle behind whistleblower initiatives such as Wikileaks, we have consistently expressed concern over the need for careful redaction in order to protect activists and dissidents living under authoritarian regimes. Early this year Index expressed its concern to Wikileaks over reports that unredacted documents had been made available to the Belarusian dictatorship.

Index on Censorship Chief executive John Kampfner commented: “Sites such as Wikileaks will continue to emerge, and will have an important role to play. But they should be operated with a great duty of care, both to whistleblowers and to individuals who may find themselves in danger after irresponsible leaks of diplomatic, intelligence or other material.

“Among the responsibilities of journalism are protection of sources and the avoidance of reckless endangerment of innocent people. These same responsibilities should be adopted by whistleblower sites.”

INDEX ON CENSORSHIP RESPONSE TO WIKILEAKS CABLES RELEASE
02 Sep 2011
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2011/09/index-on-censorship-response-to-wikileaks-cables-release/




An Ethiopian reporter cited by name in US diplomatic cables disclosed last month by WikiLeaks has been forced to flee the country after police interrogated him over the identity of an unnamed government source in the cable. On 5 and 6 September, officials from Ethiopia’s Government Communication Affairs Office (GCAO) summoned journalist Argaw Ashine to their offices in Addis Ababa with his press accreditation. Local journalists said the reporter was cited in an 26 October 26 2009 cable from the US embassy in Ethiopia regarding purported GCAO plans in 2009 to silence the now-defunct Addis Neger, then the country’s leading independent newspaper.

ETHIOPIA: JOURNALIST IDENTIFIED IN WIKILEAKS CABLE FLEES COUNTRY
15 Sep 2011
http://www.indexoncensorship.org/2011/09/ethiopia-journalist-identified-in-wikileaks-cable-flees-country/
August 4, 2012

As a political game, of course, it is entirely fascinating. Anyone, with any knowledge of the

history of the Americas, will understand why (say) Correa is sympathetic to Assange: the US has for decades run roughshod over its southern neighbors, often with no regard for human needs and rights. So when Assanger pokes a sharp stick in the eye of the US State Department, no one should be surprised that some people will naturally cheer: that natural reaction is, to reuse a famous phrase, "chickens coming home to roost"

Still, the constant bullshit, orchestrated by Assange and his supporters, does us all a real disservice, because it drowns out informed intelligent conversation. It seems to me quite likely that Assange could have cleared up the Swedish matter quickly a few years ago, had he not been so set on proving to everyone that he could get away with being a gigantic asshole

The most harmless telling of this story would be: Assange had unprotected sex with several woman who had consented to protected sex and who thereafter wanted him to undergo some STD testing; he was uncooperative in this regard, and the women took some of their dissatisfactions to the police; while the Swedish authorities were trying to schedule a follow-up interview with him, through his lawyer, he fled to the UK and refused to return to Sweden for the follow-up interview. But once outside Sweden, he made sure to be much in the press sneering about Sweden's "revolutionary feminism" and piously lamenting the tiresomeness of the various women he had recently been schtupping in Sweden -- behavior which, by any adult standard, should be regarded as thoroughly caddish. After several months, the Swedish authorities tired of the charades and took out an international warrant against him. At this point, Assange's surrogates began a full-fledged defamation campaign against the Swedish complainants (one of who alleges behavior considered to be rape in any modern jurisdiction, such as Australia, Sweden, the UK, or the US), claiming without evidence that the women were effectively US agents. Sweden successfully litigated its warrant through the UK courts, including Assange's appeals, and Assange thereupon dropped his appeals, refusing to appeal his case to Strasbourg

"Susan Benn of the Julian Assange Defense Fund" is certainly welcome to persist in her beliefs that the Swedish authorities should interview Assange in the UK, just as the Swedish authorities are welcome to persist in their beliefs that Assange should return to Sweden to be interviewed there; the difference between these views is that the view of the Swedish authorities has prevailed in the UK courts and that the loser, Assange, decided not to appeal his case further, to Strasbourg. All this is therefore irrelevant as res judicata

So, where are we now? The establishment in Ecuador is mocking the sexual crimes allegation, according to The Nation article linked in the prior post: perhaps finally chivalry really is dead. And, once again, we hear the constant claim that the Swedish warrant is a subterfuge, masking a planned US extradition, likely to lead to Assange's torture or death? That seems unlikely because the Swedish courts are constitutionally isolated from political influence, but let us examine what the UK courts said:

"... There was at one stage a suggestion that Mr Assange could be extradited to the USA (possibly to Guantanamo Bay or to execution as a traitor). The only live evidence on the point came from the defence witness Mr Alhem who said it couldn’t happen. In the absence of any evidence that Mr Assange risks torture or execution Mr Robertson was right not to pursue this point in closing. It may be worth adding that I do not know if Sweden has an extradition treaty with the United States of America. There has been no evidence regarding this. I would expect that there is such a treaty. If Mr Assange is surrendered to Sweden and a request is made to Sweden for his extradition to the United States of America, then article 28 of the framework decision applies. In such an event the consent of the Secretary of State in this country will be required, in accordance with section 58 of the Extradition Act 2003, before Sweden can order Mr Assange’s extradition to a third State. The Secretary of State is required to give notice to Mr Assange unless it is impracticable to do so. Mr Assange would have the protection of the courts in Sweden and, as the Secretary of State’s decision can be reviewed, he would have the protection of the English courts also. But none of this was argued ..."
City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court (Sitting at Belmarsh Magistrates’ Court)
The judicial authority in Sweden -v- Julian Paul Assange
Findings of facts and reasons



That is, not only did Assange choose not to argue this in the UK courts, his own witness told the UK courts that it was impossible!

Meanwhile, Baltasar Garzon is shrieking about a US grand jury:

... WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange's defence lawyer says his client, seeking asylum in Ecuador, is in a state of limbo because of secrecy from the United States over the charges it may pursue.

"We anticipate those charges, but do not have any information from the US as the grand jury proceedings are secret - and therefore the charges are secret," Baltasar Garzon, the Spanish former judge who heads Assange's legal team, said on Friday.

"If charges are secret, (Assange) is completely helpless" to plan how to answer the allegations made against him, Garzon told reporters in Quito ...


Secretive US keeping Assange in limbo: ex-judge
August 4, 2012 - 8:47AM

http://www.smh.com.au/world/secretive-us-keeping--assange-in-limbo-exjudge-20120804-23lub.html


I must confess that I have admired Garzon from afar, ever since he ruled against Pinochet, but here he exposes himself as a vacuous blowhard. Cogent criticisms, of our Federal grand jury process, do exist, but Garzon's comments are foolish and ignorant: the comments show that Garzon has been brought on board for purely political reasons
July 31, 2012

'... WikiLeaks has also infuriated the author, Michela Wrong, who was horrified to discover

her book exposing the depths of official corruption in Kenya, It's Our Turn To Eat, was pirated and posted on WikiLeaks in its entirety ... From email distribution lists she could see that the pirated version was being emailed among Kenyans at home and abroad. "I was beside myself because I thought my entire African market is vanishing," says Wrong. "I wrote to WikiLeaks and said, please, you're going to damage your own cause because if people like me can't make any money from royalties then publishers are not going to commission people writing about corruption in Africa ... He was enormously pompous, saying that in the interests of raising public awareness of the issues involved I had a duty to allow it to be pirated. He said: 'This book may have been your baby, but it is now Kenya's son.' That really stuck in my mind because it was so arrogant," she says ... WikiLeaks does apparently expect others to respect its claims to ownership. It has placed a copyright symbol at the beginning of its film about the Iraq shootings ...'
Who watches WikiLeaks?
This week a classified video of a US air crew killing unarmed Iraqis was seen by millions on the internet. But for some, the whistleblowing website itself needs closer scrutiny
Chris McGreal in Washington
guardian.co.uk, Friday 9 April 2010 16.28 EDT
http://www.guardian.co.uk/media/2010/apr/10/wikileaks-collateral-murder-video-iraq

July 30, 2012

Here are some nice links for you:

A few links indicating the sex-with-unconscious-woman aspect:

... According to the Swedish branch of Interpol, a recent arrest warrant for Assange states that the rape accusation stems from a sexual encounter in which the woman "was asleep and in a helpless state" ...
Behind Assange's Arrest: Sweden's Sex-Crime Problem
By Eben Harrell / Stockholm Thursday, Dec. 16, 2010
http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,2037078,00.html

... A second woman says Assange had sex with her without a condom while he was a guest at her Stockholm home and she was asleep ...
Sweden appeals bail for Assange
BY DAVID STRINGER
Associated Press
http://www.heraldsun.com/view/full_story/10670890/article-Sweden-appeals-bail-for-Assange

From the recent Australian Four Corners piece:

... Ardin and Wilen went to Central Stockholm's Klara police station to see if they could compel Assange to take an STD test ...
Sex, Lies and Julian Assange
By Andrew Fowler and Wayne Harley
Updated July 24, 2012 15:49:00
http://www.abc.net.au/4corners/stories/2012/07/19/3549280.htm

What Assange's lawyer told the British courts:

... Julian Assange's lawyer told a court yesterday that prosecutors attempted to interview the WikiLeaks founder over sexual assault allegations while he was still in Sweden. Bjorn Hurtig's admission contradicts his previous claim that the Swedish authorities had only asked to speak with Mr Assange after he had left the country. The lawyer admitted under cross-examination that he was mistaken to suggest that he had heard nothing from prosecutor Marianne Ny until after Mr Assange had left the country. He accepted that he was in regular contact via text message and telephone with Ms Ny, but had forgotten to include the fact in his witness statement ...
Assange lawyer admits he was wrong over interview
By Mark Hughes , Crime Correspondent
Wednesday 09 February 2011
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/assange-lawyer-admits-he-was-wrong-over-interview-2208622.html

A quick look at Assange's views on this:

... Mr Assange regards himself as a victim of radicalism. "Sweden is the Saudi Arabia of feminism," he said. "I fell into a hornets' nest of revolutionary feminism" ...
WikiLeaks founder baffled by sex assault claims
by: Marie Colvin
From: The Sunday Times
December 27, 2010 12:00AM
http://www.theaustralian.com.au/in-depth/wikileaks/wikileaks-founder-baffled-by-sex-assault-claims/story-fn775xjq-1225976459286

... After a strange few days of contact with the women, one of whom said she wanted me to do an STD test, I needed some time and space to myself, so I booked into a hotel for the night ...
Julian Assange: 'I did not rape those women'
In the first extract from the book, Julian Assange gives his version of the background to accusations of sexual assault that have led to his battle against extradition to Sweden
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/home-news/julian-assange-i-did-not-rape-those-women-2358652.html

Bottom line: The women apparently claim that they consented to sex with condom but got sex without condom, for which they had not consented, one case occurring when the woman was unconscious, which would actually be rape in many juriosdictions. Absent the condom, the women were concerned about STDs, as even Assange himself admits. The original complaint have been intended to force an STD test after the unprotected sex. Assange, however, was uncooperative and left Sweden while Swedish authorities were trying, through his lawyer, to schedule an interview with him: his comments on "revolutionary feminism" clearly exhibit his contempt. You can look up for yourself the bail cash and sureties that people fronted on Assange's behalf, before he jumped bail and hid in Ecuador's embassy

July 2, 2012

Much of the case produced by Assange's lawyers hangs on the validity of the warrants:

... The attack is threefold. Firstly Ms Ny is not eligible to issue the EAW. Secondly she is not “a judicial authority”. Thirdly the warrant is not “issued … for the purpose of being prosecuted for the offence” as required by subsections 2 and 3. The argument is set out in the skeleton argument prepared by counsel for the defendant on 4th February 2011, and is further developed in the skeleton dated 7th February 2011 ...
City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court (Sitting at Belmarsh Magistrates’ Court)
The judicial authority in Sweden -v- Julian Paul Assange
Findings of facts and reasons


... The offences of which he is accused and in respect of which his surrender is sought are alleged to have been committed in Stockholm against two women in August 2010. They include “sexual molestation” and, in one case, rape. At the extradition hearing before the Senior District Judge, and subsequently on appeal to the Divisional Court, he unsuccessfully challenged the validity of the EAW on a number of grounds. This appeal relates to only one of these. Section 2(2) in Part 1 of the Extradition Act 2003 (“the 2003 Act”) requires an EAW to be issued by a “judicial authority”. Mr Assange contends that the Prosecutor does not fall within the meaning of that phrase and that, accordingly, the EAW is invalid. This point of law is of general importance, for in the case of quite a number of Member States EAWs are issued by public prosecutors. Its resolution does not turn on the facts of Mr Assange’s case ...
The Supreme Court
Easter Term
<2012> UKSC 22
On appeal from: <2011> EWHC Admin 2849
JUDGMENT
Assange (Appellant) v The Swedish Prosecution Authority (Respondent)

July 2, 2012

No testimony on extradition to the US was provided at Belmarsh, except to discredit it:

... Sven-Eric Alhem gave evidence the next day, 8th February ... Mr Alhem retired in July 2008 after a legal career as a prosecutor, including serving as the Chief District Prosecutor in Stockholm and later as Director for the Regional Prosecution Authority in Stockholm. Since 2008 he has seen himself primarily as a social commentator on legal matters ...

He was then asked about extradition from Sweden to the United States. He is not an expert on what happens but had brought a Guide and had considered the specialty principle. His reading was that normally there could not be a further surrender to a country outside the European Union but there are exceptions. It would be “completely impossible to extradite Mr Assange to the USA without a media storm”. It is quite right to say that he would not be extradited to the USA ...

There was at one stage a suggestion that Mr Assange could be extradited to the USA (possibly to Guantanamo Bay or to execution as a traitor). The only live evidence on the point came from the defence witness Mr Alhem who said it couldn’t happen. In the absence of any evidence that Mr Assange risks torture or execution Mr Robertson was right not to pursue this point in closing. It may be worth adding that I do not know if Sweden has an extradition treaty with the United States of America. There has been no evidence regarding this. I would expect that there is such a treaty. If Mr Assange is surrendered to Sweden and a request is made to Sweden for his extradition to the United States of America, then article 28 of the framework decision applies. In such an event the consent of the Secretary of State in this country will be required, in accordance with section 58 of the Extradition Act 2003, before Sweden can order Mr Assange’s extradition to a third State. The Secretary of State is required to give notice to Mr Assange unless it is impracticable to do so. Mr Assange would have the protection of the courts in Sweden and, as the Secretary of State’s decision can be reviewed, he would have the protection of the English courts also. But none of this was argued ...


City of Westminster Magistrates’ Court (Sitting at Belmarsh Magistrates’ Court)
The judicial authority in Sweden -v- Julian Paul Assange
Findings of facts and reasons


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