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Lawyer says will fight WikiLeaks chief's extradition

US lawmakers target WikiLeaks over informants
Washington (AFP) Dec 2, 2010 - Amid calls in the US Congress to prosecute WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, a group of senators on Thursday unveiled a bill to make it easier to target the self-described whistleblowing website. The legislation, crafted by Republican Senators John Ensign and Scott Brown as well as Independent Senator Joe Lieberman would make it illegal to publish the names of informants serving the US military and intelligence community. It was not immediately clear whether the new rule would also apply to traditional US media.

Ensign accused Assange of "creating a hit list for our enemies" by making public the names of intelligence assets in a bid "to hinder our war efforts" and stressed: "WikiLeaks is not a whistleblower website and Assange is not a journalist." "Our government must make it clear that revealing the identities of these individuals will not be tolerated," said Lieberman, who chairs the Senate Homeland Security Committee. "Our foreign representatives, allies, and intelligence sources must have the clear assurance that their lives will not be endangered by those with opposing agendas, whether they are Americans or not," he added.

WikiLeaks threw US diplomacy into chaos on Sunday as it published the first batch of more than 250,000 US classified diplomatic cables the website is believed to have obtained from a disaffected US soldier. Lawmakers expressed outrage in July when WikiLeaks released a batch of some 90,000 logs about the Afghanistan war, charging the site had exposed US troops' Afghan informants to potentially deadly retaliation by releasing their names. US officials have yet to document any fatalities linked to the disclosures. Brown said the legislation, which would amend the US Espionage Act aimed at punishing the disclosure of secret information, would give US authorities "a tool to prevent something like this from happening again."
by Staff Writers
Stockholm (AFP) Dec 2, 2010
WikiLeaks head Julian Assange's Stockholm-based lawyer Bjoern Hurtig said Thursday he would fight his client's extradition to Sweden in the event of his arrest.

"Together with my British colleague Mark Stephens and international experts, we will fight the extradition warrants," Hurtig told AFP.

Hurtig refused to say where his client was.

The global police agency Interpol said Wednesday it had alerted member states to arrest Assange on suspicion of rape on the basis of a Swedish arrest warrant.

"If he gets arrested, the country in which he will be arrested will have to hold a hearing regarding the Swedish request for having him taken to Sweden," Hurtig explained.

"As soon as he comes to Sweden, I'll take over again and lead the defence team from here and we will challenge any decision holding him in further custody," Hurtig said, adding Assange's London-based lawyer Stephens was handling all procedures outside of Sweden.

Newspapers in Britain reported that the 39-year-old Australian was believed to be in southeast England and that Scotland Yard had been in touch with his legal team for weeks but had been hamstrung by an error in a Swedish arrest warrant.

"Scotland Yard know where he is, the security services from a number of countries know where is," Stephens told AFP.

Also asked about the reports that the nomadic former computer hacker was in southeast England, Stephens said: "I have not said that. I am not saying where he is."

Stephens has said the hunt for Assange may be related to US anger over revelations by WikiLeaks, which has published thousands of US diplomatic cables as well as docuements relating to the Iraq and Afghan wars in recent months.

earlier related report
Tempers rise over WikiLeaks revelations
Washington (AFP) Dec 1, 2010 - The United States on Wednesday faced a storm of anger from foreign governments who were scrutinized in leaked cables as President Barack Obama named an expert to prevent it from happening again.

Under pressure, Amazon booted activist website WikiLeaks from its servers, forcing it onto European Web hosts. WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange went deep into hiding after Interpol called for his arrest on rape allegations.

While many countries initially took WikiLeaks' release of secret cables in stride, a growing number of foreign leaders voiced outrage upon learning that US diplomats privately doubted their intentions, abilities or integrity.

Russian Prime Minister Vladimir Putin was not amused by leaked cables in which US officials called Russia "an oligarchy run by the security services," suspected mafia influence over the city of Moscow and said President Dmitry Medvedev played "Robin to Putin's Batman."

"To be honest with you, we didn't suspect that this would be done with such arrogance, with such a push and, you know, being so unethically done," Putin told CNN's "Larry King Live."

Putin warned the United States not to "interfere" in Russia. But the former KGB spy also suggested a more complicated theory -- that "somebody" with a political agenda was feeding the cables for WikiLeaks to release.

"So I don't see this as being a catastrophe," Putin said.

In Turkey, Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan was livid at allegations mentioned in the cables that he kept secret Swiss bank accounts.

"I do not have one penny in Swiss banks," Erdogan said, urging Washington to "call to account" its diplomats for "slander derived from lies and inaccurate opinions."

In Argentina, a government minister said it was "shameful" that US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton inquired through a cable about the psychological health of President Cristina Kirchner.

Elsewhere in Latin America, where suspicions of US foreign policy run deep, Uruguay said it would contact the US embassy about the cables. Former Cuban leader Fidel Castro, a longtime US nemesis, spoke of "a colossal scandal."

China earlier demanded action and blocked the WikiLeaks website. Pakistan's Prime Minister Yousuf Raza Gilani called in the US ambassador for talks after leaked cables on the two nations' sensitive war alliance.

At a summit in Kazakhstan, Clinton met with UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, who according to a leaked cable has undergone US surveillance.

"I do not believe that anybody would be happy when somebody knows that he or she is under watch by somebody," Ban told reporters.

Obama named Russell Travers, an anti-terrorism expert, to "lead a comprehensive effort to identify and develop the structural reforms needed in light of the WikiLeaks breach," the White House said.

The State Department has already temporarily suspended Pentagon access to some documents. WikiLeaks is believed to have obtained 250,000 cables from Bradley Manning, a disgruntled 23-year-old Army intelligence officer.

WikiLeaks was thrown off its Web host Amazon, best known as a book retailer. After several hours of disruption, WikiLeaks was again accessible in the United States via a European server.

US lawmakers vowed to seek answers from Amazon on why it hosted WikiLeaks.

"This situation should serve as an example for all private US and international companies that conducting business with WikiLeaks is intolerable and against American interests," said Peter King, a Republican congressman from New York.

WikiLeaks mocked the move in a message on Twitter, saying: "Free speech the land of the free -- fine our dollars are now spent to employ people in Europe."

Assange, a 39-year-old Australian computer hacker, was reported to gone under disguise. Interpol early Wednesday called on member-nations to arrest him on a Swedish warrant for questioning over allegations of rape and molestation.

"He is justified in being concerned for his safety. When you have people calling, for example, for his assassination, it is best to keep a low profile," WikiLeaks spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson said in London.

Canadian pundit Tom Flanagan said on a talk-show that Obama should assassinate Assange as the leak risked starting war in the Middle East. Flanagan later regretted his "glib" remarks.

Despite the strong reaction in parts of the world, some US allies such as Italian Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi -- whose purported late-night partying was detailed by a cable -- have downplayed the leaks.

Clinton lavished Berlusconi with praise during a meeting in Kazakhstan, saying: "We have no one who supports American policies as consistently."

Kenyan Prime Minister Raila Odinga -- whose nation was reportedly described in one US cable as a "swamp of flourishing corruption" -- even welcomed the disclosures as "helpful."



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SUPERPOWERS
Tempers rise over WikiLeaks revelations
Washington (AFP) Dec 1, 2010
The United States on Wednesday faced a storm of anger from foreign governments who were scrutinized in leaked cables as President Barack Obama named an expert to prevent it from happening again. Under pressure, Amazon booted activist website WikiLeaks from its servers, forcing it onto European Web hosts. WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange went deep into hiding after Interpol called for his ar ... read more







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