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Julian Assange arrives at the Supreme Court on 1 February 2012. Photograph: Getty Images |
The British government’s threat to invade the Ecuadorean embassy in
London and seize Julian Assange is of historic significance. David
Cameron, the former PR man to a television industry huckster and arms
salesman to sheikdoms, is well placed to dishonour international
conventions that have protected Britons in places of upheaval. Just as
Tony Blair’s invasion of Iraq led directly to the acts of terrorism in
London on 7 July 2005, so Cameron and Foreign Secretary William Hague
have compromised the safety of British representatives across the world.
Threatening to abuse a law designed to expel murderers from foreign
embassies, while defaming an innocent man as an “alleged criminal”,
Hague has made a laughing stock of Britain across the world, though this
view is mostly suppressed in Britain. The same brave newspapers and
broadcasters that have supported Britain’s part in epic bloody crimes,
from the genocide in Indonesia to the invasions of Iraq and Afghanistan,
now attack the “human rights record” of Ecuador, whose real crime is to
stand up to the bullies in London and Washington.
Unclubbable
It is as if the Olympics happy-clappery has been subverted overnight
by an illuminating display of colonial thuggery. Witness the British
army officer-cum-BBC reporter Mark Urban “interviewing” a braying Sir
Christopher Meyer, Blair’s former apologist in Washington, outside the
Ecuadorean embassy, the pair of them erupting with Blimpish indignation
that the unclubbable Assange and the uncowed Rafael Correa should expose
the western system of rapacious power. Similar affront is vivid in the
pages of the Guardian, which has counselled Hague to be “patient” and
that storming the embassy would be “more trouble than it is worth”.
Assange was not a political refugee, the Guardian declared, because
“neither Sweden nor the UK would in any case deport someone who might
face torture or the death penalty”.
The irresponsibility of this statement matches the Guardian’s
perfidious role in the whole Assange affair. The paper knows full well
that documents released by WikiLeaks indicate that Sweden has
consistently submitted to pressure from the United States in matters of
civil rights. In December 2001, the Swedish government abruptly revoked
the political refugee status of two Egyptians, Ahmed Agiza and Mohammed
el-Zari, who were handed to a CIA kidnap squad at Stockholm airport and
“rendered” to Egypt, where they were tortured. An investigation by the
Swedish ombudsman for justice found that the government had “seriously
violated” the two men’s human rights.
In a 2009 US embassy cable obtained by WikiLeaks, entitled
“WikiLeaks puts neutrality in the Dustbin of History”, the Swedish
elite’s vaunted reputation for neutrality is exposed as a sham. Another
US cable reveals that “the extent of [Sweden’s military and
intelligence] co-operation [with Nato] is not widely known” and unless
kept secret “would open the government to domestic criticism”.
The Swedish foreign minister, Carl Bildt, played a notorious leading
role in George W Bush’s Committee for the Liberation of Iraq and retains
close ties to the Republican Party’s extreme right. According to the
former Swedish director of public prosecutions Sven-Erik Alhem, Sweden’s
decision to seek the extradition of Assange on allegations of sexual
misconduct is “unreasonable and unprofessional, as well as unfair and
disproportionate”. Having offered himself for questioning, Assange was
given permission to leave Sweden for London where, again, he offered to
be questioned. In May, in a final appeal judgment on the extradition,
Britain’s Supreme Court introduced more farce by referring to
non-existent “charges”.
Accompanying this has been a vituperative personal campaign against
Assange. Much of it has emanated from the Guardian, which, like a
spurned lover, has turned on its besieged former source, having hugely
profited from WikiLeaks disclosures. With not a penny going to Assange
or WikiLeaks, a Guardian book has led to a lucrative Hollywood movie
deal. The authors, David Leigh and Luke Harding, gratuitously abuse
Assange as a “damaged personality” and “callous”. They also reveal the
secret password he had given the paper which was designed to protect a
digital file containing the US embassy cables. On 20 August, Harding was
outside the Ecuadorean embassy, gloating on his blog that “Scotland
Yard may get the last laugh”. It is ironic, if entirely appropriate,
that a Guardian editorial putting the paper’s latest boot into Assange
bears an uncanny likeness to the Murdoch press’s predictable augmented
bigotry on the same subject. How the glory of Leveson, Hackgate and
honourable, independent journalism doth fade.
Not a fugitive
His tormentors make the point of Assange’s persecution. Charged with
no crime, he is not a fugitive from justice. Swedish case documents,
including the text messages of the women involved, demonstrate to any
fair-minded person the absurdity of the sex allegations – allegations
almost entirely promptly dismissed by the senior prosecutor in
Stockholm, Eva Finné, before the intervention of a politician, Claes
Borgström. At the pre-trial of Bradley Manning, a US army investigator
confirmed that the FBI was secretly targeting the “founders, owners or
managers of WikiLeaks” for espionage.
Four years ago, a barely noticed Pentagon document, leaked by
WikiLeaks, described how WikiLeaks and Assange would be destroyed with a
smear campaign leading to “criminal prosecution”. On 18 August, the
Sydney Morning Herald disclosed, in a Freedom of Information release of
official files, that the Australian government had repeatedly received
confirmation that the US was conducting an “unprecedented” pursuit of
Assange and had raised no objections. Among Ecuador’s reasons for
granting asylum is Assange’s abandonment “by the state of which he is a
citizen”. In 2010, an investigation by the Australian Federal Police
found that Assange and WikiLeaks had committed no crime. His persecution
is an assault on us all and on freedom.
Source: New Statesman