World

WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Concerned About Biden Administration's Inertia in Assange Case

LONDON (Sputnik) - WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson on Friday expressed concerns over US President Joe Biden's reluctance to drop the Trump administration's policy of pursuing charges against Julian Assange.
Sputnik

"I am seriously concerned that we have not received any signal from the Biden administration that they will do the right thing and drop the case against Julian. This just doesn't make any sense that the Biden-Harris administration will not take the same stands as the Obama-Biden administration ... To do nothing and to say 'well we are not going to politicize the Department of Justice, is absolutely wrong," Hrafnsson said at a press briefing ahead of World Press Freedom Day.

UK Conspired against Assange; CNN Hires Propagandist; US Police Killings a Crime Against Humanity
According to the Icelandic investigative journalist, there needs to be a political decision to stop the politically motivated prosecution of Assange.

Hrafnsson went on to compare the WikiLeaks founder with Russian opposition activist Alexey Navalny, who is serving a 2.5-year sentence on fraud charges, noting that this comparison is not in the UK's favor.

"Think about the fact that we were all able to see Navalny in court. Navalny was able to speak in court in Russia. Observers were able to be in the courtroom ... Julian was not allowed to speak, there were no cameras allowed in the courtroom, and observers had extreme difficulty to be present in the courtroom. This is not a favorable comparison towards the United Kingdom," the journalist noted.

Assange was arrested in London on April 11, 2019, and sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for jumping bail back in 2012, when he took refuge inside the Ecuadorean embassy in the UK capital to avoid extradition to Sweden, where he was facing sexual assault charges that were later dropped by the Swedish court.

WikiLeaks Editor-in-Chief Concerned About Biden Administration's Inertia in Assange Case

The whistleblower is wanted by the US Justice Department on espionage and computer fraud charges after WikiLeaks published thousands of secret files and classified information that shed light on war crimes committed by US troops in Iraq and Afghanistan. He faces up to 175 years in solitary confinement inside a top security American prison if convicted in the US.

In January, UK district judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled not to extradite Assange to the United States, citing health reasons and the risk of suicide in the US prison system, but decided that he must wait in prison for the outcome of an appeal filed by US prosecutors.

Discuss