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Julian Assange says 'justice not dead yet' as bail granted
Thursday 16 December 2010Julian Assange has walked out of the High Court in London exclaiming "justice is not dead yet" after being freed on bail by a judge pending extradition proceedings in the New Year.Julian Assange was granted bail at the High Court after a senior judge rejected an appeal against a lower court's decision earlier this week to release the WikiLeaks founder on strict conditional bail pending moves to extradite him to Sweden.
He told a press pack outside that "justice is not dead yet" after thanking his legal team and the British court system.
The 39-year-old Australian is wanted in Sweden for alleged sex offences.
Speaking earlier, Mark Stephens, lawyer for Julian Assange, said he was "utterly delighted" to win bail, adding that his client was the victim of a "continued vendetta".
Bail conditions imposed at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court earlier this week included the posting of a £200,000 cash deposit, with a further £40,000 guaranteed in two sureties of £20,000.
Journalist John Pilger told Channel 4 News that although he had been willing to put money forward, it was not necessary as Assange had enough people offering to do so.
Outside court, Mr Pilger called the decision to release Assange on bail "a little bit of justice."
Explaining why he offered to help the WikiLeaks founder, Mr Pilger said "this is an innocent man until proven otherwise, and it is about the free flow of information, of which WikiLeaks is an exemplar."
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Assange is now expected to reside at the property of supporter and journalist Vaughan Smith in Suffolk.
'Bail risk'
Gemma Lindfield, appearing for the Swedish authorities, told the judge there was "a real risk" that Assange would abscond if granted bail.Ms Lindfield said there were "strong reasons" to believe he would fail to attend court for the full duration of the extradition hearing and to surrender to police if extradition was ordered.
She described Assange as living a nomadic lifestyle with no significant ties in the UK, and those offering to provide sureties had not known him long.
Rejecting her submissions and ordering conditional bail, the judge described how, shortly after he arrived in the UK from Sweden, Assange had been aware that the allegations against him in Sweden were still live.
He had made arrangements for his solicitors to be his point of contact with the Metropolitan Police so that, in the event of a search warrant being issued, the police would not have to search for him.
The judge said: "That is not the conduct of a person who is seeking to evade justice."
'Justice'
Vaughan Smith, founder of the journalists' Frontline Club in London told Channel 4 News he had offered his property to Assange because he wanted "justice" for the WikiLeaks founder.
"I am a journalist and a former soldier. I am not uninformed about these matters. I expect I am going to get some flak, but my wife agreed with me about offering him a place to stay. I have children living with me, and Julian gets death threats. But I have complete confidence that the police will protect the address if they need to.
"I got to know Julian well over the last five months. As a journalist, I felt it is important to take a position on this issue. I think that Julian holds up a mirror that journalists like myself can look into, and perhaps we don’t always like what we see. I think journalism is getting closer to power and to the establishment than we have realised."
The appeal application was heard at the High Court by Mr Justice Ouseley who last week, in another high-profile case, rejected an appeal by South African authorities and allowed bail pending extradition proceedings for Shrien Dewani, the husband of a woman murdered on honeymoon in South Africa.
Assange's mother Christine arrived at court flanked by plain-clothes bodyguards and police officers. She did not comment.
A handful of supporters gathered, wearing T-shirts with an image of Assange and reading: "WikiLeaks, information wants to be free."
Veteran campaigning journalist John Pilger, who put up a £20,000 surety, branded the case against Assange "ridiculous" and said he has support all over the world.
As he left the court, novelist Tariq Ali said Assange smiled as he was told he would be released on bail.
He said: "The atmosphere in court was one of general relief and smiles all around, apart from on the faces of the prosecution.
"Mr Assange smiled as well. His mother looked very relieved. He has been put through it so I think things are clearer now than after the last decision.
"All in all, it has been a good morning."
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WikiLeaks' Assange: 'ongoing attempts' to extradite me to US
Thursday 16 December 2010
WikiLeaks editor Julian Assange has told Channel 4 News there is an "ongoing attempt" by the US to extradite him and a "clear abuse of process" by Sweden. It follows his release on bail in London.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has told Channel 4 News he believes there are a number of forces "pushing together for their perceived mutual interest" to try to keep him in custody and get him extradited, eventually to the US.
He was speaking just an hour after emerging from the High Court in London vowing to "continue his work and protest his innocence" after being released on bail. He told a mob of reporters "justice is not dead yet" after thanking his legal team and the British court system.
The 39-year-old Australian is wanted in Sweden for alleged sex offences. Bail conditions imposed at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court earlier this week included the posting of a £200,000 cash deposit, with a further £40,000 guaranteed in two sureties of £20,000.

Assange spoke to Jon Snow by telephone live onChannel 4 News and described the long hours he has spent waiting inside Wandsworth prison.
He said: "Solitary confinement in the basement of a Victorian prison is not an experience I would gladly repeat.
"It gave me some time to read and to understand the situation I was in and to see myself very clearly - and what I saw was that I was quite confident about my position and very angry about the circumstances in which I found myself.
What I saw was that I was quite confident about my position and very angry about the circumstances in which I found myself. Julian Assange
"This is a complex case, there are a number of motivations at play - those include the United States, certain political forces that have to do with domestic politics in Sweden, probably personal jealousies... all these factors intermixed.
"Like any rare event it is the combination of all these forces pushing together for their perceived mutual interest."
The 39-year-old's lawyers have accused the Swedish authorities of waging a "vendetta" against him.
Mr Assange told Channel 4 News he fears a fresh attempt to detain him and have him sent to the US is imminent.
He explained: "Let me make a clear warning. There is an ongoing attempt in the US to work out a way to extradite me to the United States - extradition is much more likely to occur if I am already in Sweden.
Let me make a clear warning. There is an ongoing attempt in the US to work out a way to extradite me to the United States.Julian Assange
"Since this case has activated there has been argument time and time again that there is no need to present any evidence whatsoever...
"Rape is what the allegation is - let's see the evidence. There has never been a single page provided to me in an any form to me. We still do not have the evidence - even in Swedish.
"This is a clear abuse of process - we have received intelligence that there will be another attempt to abuse that process in the next 24 hours."
A spokeswoman from the US Department of Justice would only confirm that there is "an ongoing investigation into the WikiLeaks matter".
Earlier this week at City of Westminster Magistrates' Court Assange was granted bail pending the bid to extradite him to Sweden.
But he remained in prison while the authorities challenged his release at the High Court in London, arguing that there was "a real risk" he would abscond.
Earlier Mr Justice Ouseley rejected submissions that the risk he posed made it impossible to set him free. The judge said his co-operation with police suggested he was not "a person who is seeking to evade justice".
>via: http://www.channel4.com/news/wikileaks-assange-ongoing-attempts-to-extradite-...
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Julian Assange...
Exclusive: The world's most wanted house guest
Why I'm sheltering Julian Assange, by Vaughan Smith
For the past fortnight, Julian Assange, founder of WikiLeaks, has been at the centre of a global firestorm. Wanted by Interpol, by the Swedish police, even, briefly, by Scotland Yard, he has been called a terrorist and a revolutionary. Several leading American politicians and commentators have called for him to be killed, while Russia and China have also been loud in their condemnation. Yesterday, Assange appeared at City of Westminster magistrates’ court to fight extradition to Sweden on sex charges that he says are politically motivated. He was granted bail – subject to an appeal by Swedish prosecutors that could see him spend a further 48 hours in custody – on condition that he provides a security of £200,000 to the court, with a further £40,000 guaranteed in two sureties of £20,000 each – and that he spends between now and 11 January as the house guest of Vaughan Smith, a former Grenadier Guard and founder of the journalists' Frontline Club.
He will be under curfew every day from 10pm to 2am and from 10am to 2pm and will be required to report daily to the police from 6pm to 8pm. He must spend every night at Mr Smith's home and will be electronically tagged.
Mr Assange has for several months been staying as a guest of Mr Smith and other members at the Frontline Club in London, which he founded seven years ago to stand for independence and transparency, and he has also stayed at Mr Smith's home in Suffolk. Below is Mr Smith's account of the past weeks...
Having watched Julian Assange give himself up last week to the British justice system, I took the decision that I would do whatever else it took to ensure that he is not denied his basic rights as a result of the anger of the powerful forces he has enraged.
This decision – which will result in one of the most unusual Christmases I have ever experienced – began to take shape last Monday night, as we gathered round a computer in my home, talking via Skype to Mark Stephens, Julian’s solicitor, in London.
This is how I remember the scene...
It is late in the evening. The screen periodically goes to sleep and Sue, a friend, keeps tapping the keyboard to keep it awake, relighting their faces.
Julian is completely still except his foot, which he rocks from side to side. I remember being told that he always did this when he was concentrating.
I feel that I am intruding, but Julian smiles at me. He does that: brings you in and makes you feel you are important to him when most of us would feel too preoccupied to do such a thing.
Julian is in front of a computer all the time. Immersed and uninterruptable; you feel you could arrive in a clown suit and he wouldn’t notice you.
But often you can gently greet him while he is typing furiously and he will immediately stop what he is doing and report developments for half an hour, well beyond the time you feel he should get back to his work.
The call is finished, and Julian is standing by the fireplace. Miles away. We start discussing the call. A couple of other friends and supporters are there too. Julian is still quiet but he is listening to us. The conversation dries up because the call to Mark has brought it all home.
There seemed to be other options, but they are all of straw. Julian dismisses each as it is suggested. He doesn’t want to look as if he has something to hide. The British police have said they want him and he is going in.
Sue and the other friends start discussing his statement. I get my camera set to film it for them and start working on the logistics. I don’t work for WikiLeaks, but I get drawn in. The police have given less time than expected and he cannot be late.
Julian sits on the sofa. Then he lies down. Then he sleeps. He’s been up for 48 hours. We don’t film any statement.
Then it is morning. He has to be at the police station at 9am, and Mark and the defence team need to see him at 7am. Sue and Jeremy are struggling to get Julian out of the building and trying to keep everyone’s spirits up by joking with him that he is never on time for anything.
We are all exhausted, and I can see that Sue is holding back tears as she bundles Julian into the car. Sue, Julian and I drive off but everyone expects us to be back by the evening.
We get to Mark’s home and it’s still dark. I notice a photographer getting his camera out of the boot of his car as we are about to park behind it, and we drive past. He deserved a picture for getting up that early on a cold morning to stake out Julian’s solicitor’s home, but he didn’t get it.
We meet Mark in a nearby greasy spoon and have breakfast in a back room. Julian is hungry, as he had no dinner last night. Mark gets straight into discussing the case and tells us that the police have changed the station that Julian is to report to.
Mark’s manner is grave but comforting and I can see that Julian and Sue are feeling the pressure. Sue goes out for another cigarette.
Jennifer joins us from Mark’s team and we drive to Kentish Town Police Station. Sue drives, Mark is on his mobile for most of the journey and we are all trying to be quiet. Julian is in the back, between Mark and Jennifer, on his computer, working on the statement.
I look at the familiar glow of the computer screen on Julian’s face, and after a while I notice the computer go to sleep. But Julian doesn’t switch it on again. He stares through it and I look away as I find myself feeling a surge of empathy for him. The statement is not finished as we arrive at the police station.
We drive through large blue gates and bland and besuited policemen and women are around the car. Mark and Julian get out and I try to observe while Sue struggles to park in the absurdly small parking space that she is directed to. I feel intimidated by the brutish ordinariness that this damned place exudes from every structure and person. I have visited police stations and prisons but never felt so uncomfortable before.
We are gathered behind Julian and Mark and a policeman reads out four Swedish charges, but I am not listening. Where I am standing, on one side, I can see Julian’s still face as he hears them. I admire his courage. He knows more clearly than anybody that he pressed the trigger long ago. Or, rather, the return key. The leaks are unstoppable whatever happens to him.
I ponder the disservice to Julian done by the media. With their stockings stuffed by WikiLeaks they dehumanise him with images printed and screened of a cold, calculating Machiavelli pulling strings from secret hideouts. The main hideout, of course, being the Frontline Club, where many of them have interviewed him.
They made him out to be the internet’s Bin Laden. The likeness might be poor, but that was OK because the colours were familiar and bright. Now the focus is on Julian’s court fight, instead of on the opaque political system that his leaks have exposed. The charges that Julian faces have already been dropped once, from a Swedish court that even Glenn Beck, the incendiary US Fox News TV host, rubbishes.
Julian is different to most of us. He is clever and obsessive but also funny and self-deprecating. But he has started something seismic but inevitable, a consequence of modern communications that cannot be stopped. One day we might be governed better as a result. Vengeance by the authorities is weakness here and will not help us face the challenges of the times.
I resolved then, and on that ugly spot, that I would never abandon Julian. It wasn’t any more about whether Wikileaks was right or wrong, for good or bad. It was about standing up to the bully and the question of whether our country, in these historic times really was the tolerant, independent and open place I had been brought up to believe it was and feel that it needs to be. If to fight for this country we will have to fight for its fundamental principles of justice then I declare my position in the ranks.
>via: http://www.independent.co.uk/news/uk/crime/exclusive-the-worlds-most-wanted-h...