Washington v WikiLeaks: how the US pursued Julian Assange

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Washington v WikiLeaks: how the US pursued Julian Assange
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Almost 14 years after the mass leak of secret military and diplomatic files, the organisation’s founder has struck a plea deal with the US, leaving prison in the UK to return to Australia

It is more than a decade since WikiLeaks published the material for which the US sought Julian Assange’s extradition. Here, the Guardian details the twists, turns, accusations and counter-accusations that occurred before he was finally allowed to return to his native Australia following aAssange, an Australian citizen, set up WikiLeaks in 2006, the same year that Twitter was launched.

During that time he was visited by journalists and an eclectic mix of guests, including the actor Pamela Anderson, the singerinto the WikiLeaks founder , concluding there was no practical way of continuing. However, the British police said they would still arrest Assange if he left the embassy as he had breached the terms of his bail. Assange had told journalists in 2013 thatinadvertently named

His prolonged stay in the embassy prompted concerns about the effects it was having on him. In 2015, the UN working group on arbitrary detention said he was being, and called on the authorities to end his “deprivation of liberty”. Three years later, clinicians who assessed Assange said his long stay in the embassyamid concerns WikiLeaks’ continued publications were interfering in other countries’ affairs.

Julian Assange’s release frees up one UK prison cell, but why has it taken so long – and what about the others?At last, Julian Assange is free. But it may have come at a high price for press freedomJulian Assange may be on his way to freedom but this is not a clear victory for freedom of the press

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