
WikiLeaks has awakened many people to the cynical and violent workings of the political, military and corporate entities that run the world. For Christine Assange this awakening has been heightened because her son is WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange ā now the target of the powerful 1% who have not appreciated his contribution to transparency.
āI started off on this journey saying WikiLeaks is great in theory but ⦠Iām not going to support it publicly before Iāve read everything I can on it,ā she told Āé¶¹“«Ć½ Weekly. āIt was quite a journey for me.ā
āIām really just the average Mary Smith ⦠Now I am horrified, both about the threat to Julian, and about the threat to global democracy, that I discovered from investigation and reading of my own.ā
Her journey is taking her to Canberra on November 17, when US President Barack Obama is addressing the Australian parliament and meeting PM Julia Gillard. She will join anti-war protesters opposing the Australia-US alliance. She accused the Australian government of āarse-coveringā for the US over WikiLeaks, and failing its obligations to an Australian citizen for the sake of the US alliance.
āIn my opinion we have become nothing more than a franchise of the US and Julia Gillard has traded my son for her position as prime minister ⦠Iām going right to where the buck stops, which is Canberra, and Iāll be talking to people about this case.
āThe only way we can get protection for our citizens ā because if they wonāt protect Julian, they wonāt protect anyone else ā is to let them know, so Iām asking the people to make November 17, not ācelebrate Obama dayā but āsupport Julian Assange dayā.ā
Pointing out the government spends money encouraging people in schools and workplaces to stand up to bullying she said: āWeāve got a global bully arriving here on November 17, weāve got to tell him where to go ⦠We can renegotiate ANZUS and say āweāll go with you on some things but not other thingsā.
āTheyāve dragged us into so many wars that in hindsight were no good ⦠There are many military and ex-military people [in the US and Australia] who are unhappy with the way the wars are being run ⦠In fact, a veteransā organisation called Stand Fast will be protesting in Canberra.ā
She said most Australians support WikiLeaks and Julian Assange. āIf this parliament does not represent us ā and our human rights, free speech and democracy ā then they need to go ⦠If the Greens are the only ones to support him, maybe what the average Aussie should do is vote in the Greens next election.
āI believe the only hope for Julian now is for a grassroots democracy uprising.ā
On November 3, Julian Assange lost an appeal to the British High Court against extradition to Sweden for questioning on sexual assault allegations. He has not, so far, been charged over the allegations, made last year. Christine Assange is sceptical about the fairness of the legal processes in Sweden and Britain, and fearful that he will end up in US custody.
āThis was a political case, right from the word go,ā she told GLW. āThere are documented abuses all over his case, even Swedish judges have come out and said that. The banking blockade against WikiLeaks, the release of the US diplomatic cables and the āred noticeā [international arrest warrant] all came out within 10 days of each other. To say this case is not political is naive in the extreme.ā
As if to confirm this, on November 10, a US judge ruled that Twitter must give the US Justice Department access to the accounts of Twitter users linked to WikiLeaks, including Icelandic MP Birgitta Jonsdottir.
the British Guardian: āThis is a huge blow for everybody that uses social media. We have to have the same civil rights online as we have offline. Imagine if the US authorities wanted to do a house search at my home, go through my private papers. There would be a hell of a fight. Itās absolutely unacceptable.ā
Julian Assange has been given three weeks to apply, to the same High Court judges that made the November 3 ruling, for permission to appeal to the Supreme Court. āIf they agree, then it goes up to the Supreme Court, but if they donāt, which is more likely, then in 10 days he will be in Sweden.ā
Christine Assange said her son could get an unfair trial in Sweden, where there are provisions for incommunicado detention and secret trial, and where cases are not heard by juries but by a panel of three: a judge and an appointee from each of the main political parties.
However, she was more fearful that he would be sent to the US. This could happen through āextraordinary renditionā, the program of illegal abductions, under which thousands of mostly innocent people were tortured by the CIA in secret āblack sitesā all over the world or sent to pro-US dictatorships to be tortured under CIA supervision. She questioned whether Obama had followed through on his election promise to end this practice.
He could also be extradited from Sweden to the US. Under European law, Sweden should be able to extradite him to a third country only if approved by the British extradition hearing. āThe way that the US gets around that is that theyāve got a bilateral treaty with Sweden for what they call ātemporary surrenderā, which has none of the safeguards a normal extradition treaty has.ā
Christine Assange described in some detail the inhuman torture and humiliation to which US Army Private Bradley Manning has been subjected since he was arrested and charged with leaking information to Wikileaks.
She said: āPJ Crowley, the State Department spokesman, resigned over it [because] it violated the US Constitutionās amendments banning cruel and unusual punishment and pre-trial punishment.ā
She said the torture was aimed at coercing Manning into giving false evidence against Julian Assange as US authorities were so far unable to build a credible case under their espionage and national security laws.
But Christine Assange is not just a mother campaigning for her sonās safety. She cited three exposes by WikiLeaks that particularly affected her. One revealed then PM Kevin Rudd had that Australia would look the other way if their shipping violated laws to protect the Great Barrier Reef from oil spills.
Another showed as a āgold rushā for US corporations and an opportunity to stop the Haitian government raising the minimum wage. The cable showed the US also manoeuvring to stop Venezuela providing aid.
She said she was also shocked by the WikiLeaksā coverage of Western human rights abuses in Iraq, such as the against corruption to Iraqi police for torture.
āIām not internet savvy ⦠It was a real journey and what I found was that if you get your information from mainstream media, you wouldnāt get enough information, or you get skewed information.ā
This journey has taken her to being a campaigner against the Australia-US alliance. āJulia Gillard likes to be seen as tough,ā she said. āBut all Iāve seen is her be tough on single mothers, tough on people with disabilities, tough on orphaned refugee children and tough on Australian animals. Iāve yet to see her be tough as leader of the country, to stand up for the country. Iāve yet to see her show any courage like my son has shown.ā
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