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Australia: Wikileaks founder Assange speaks out for the first time since release

Julian Assange will speak publicly for the first time since his imprisonment in 2019. (Archive image)

Keystone

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who was released in June, wants to speak publicly for the first time since his imprisonment in 2019. As Wikileaks announced on Wednesday, Assange will travel from Australia to the Council of Europe in Strasbourg on October 1.

There he will testify before the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights, which has been dealing with his case. According to the session calendar, the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe will be dealing with Assange’s case on October 2. Wikileaks stated that his testimony before the Committee on Legal Affairs and Human Rights will take place on October 1.

Since Russia’s exclusion, 46 countries have joined the Council of Europe, which sees itself as the guardian of human rights. The organization is not affiliated with the EU.

Assange returned to his home country Australia at the end of June after a total of twelve years in embassy asylum and prison in Great Britain. As part of an agreement with the US justice system, the Australian pleaded guilty to conspiracy to pass on information for national defense purposes. He was formally sentenced to five years and two months in prison.

This sentence had already been served by his five-year sentence in the British Belmarsh prison. Before his imprisonment, Assange had found asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy in London for seven years.

Confidential documents published

The US judiciary had accused Assange of publishing around 700,000 confidential documents about US military and diplomatic activities starting in 2010. The papers contained explosive information about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, including the killing of civilians and the mistreatment of prisoners by US soldiers.

For his supporters, Assange is a hero who fights for freedom of expression. His critics see him as a traitor who has endangered the security of the United States and intelligence sources.

SDA

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