Showing posts with label whistleblower. Show all posts
Showing posts with label whistleblower. Show all posts

Friday, March 16, 2012

La «taupe» Manning présumée d'avoir aidé Al-Qaïda

TRIBUNE DE GENÈVE: Le soldat Bradley Manning a aidé Al-Qaïda en transmettant des milliers de documents militaires et de câbles diplomatiques, a accusé jeudi le gouvernement américain.

L'ancien analyste de renseignements en Irak a été formellement accusé fin février de «collusion avec l'ennemi» et cet ennemi a été identifié comme étant Al-Qaïda jeudi lors d'une audience préliminaire à Fort Meade (Maryland, Est), présidée par la juge militaire, Denise Lind.

La défense, elle, réclame un non-lieu pour manque de transparence.

«Qui est l'ennemi?», a déclaré la magistrate, en lisant une question de la défense.

«La réponse est: Al-Qaïda dans la Péninsule arabique», a-t-elle ajouté en citant l'accusation.

Elle a également précisé, en réponse à une autre demande de la défense, que Bradley Manning avait «aidé l'ennemi» en «transmettant des informations via le site internet WikiLeaks». » | afp/Newsnet | jeudi 15 mars 2012

Monday, February 27, 2012

Bill Clinton and Bradley Manning Nominated for Nobel Peace Prize

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: A total of 231 nominees are up for the Nobel Peace Prize this year, the Nobel Institute said on Monday, with Bill Clinton, Helmut Kohl, the EU and US soldier and WikiLeaks suspect Bradley Manning known to be on the list.

"As always, there are the usual 'nominees' and some newcomers, some famous and some unknowns, hailing from the four corners of the world," the head of the Nobel Institute, Geir Lundestad, told AFP.

With 188 individuals and 43 organisations, the number of candidates comes close to last year's record of 241, when the award went to Liberian President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf, Liberian activist Leymah Gbowee, and Yemeni "Arab Spring" activist Tawakkol Karman. » | AFP | Monday, February 27, 2012

Saturday, February 04, 2012

WikiLeaks: Bradley Manning to Face Full Court Martial

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: The US Army has approved a recommendation that Bradley Manning be court-martialed for allegedly funneling hundreds of thousands of classified documents to WikiLeaks.

The decision clears the way to set a date for Manning, a private with the Army, to face a host of charges, including that he aided the enemy and wrongfully caused intelligence to be openly published on the Internet.

"A military judge will be detailed by the US Army Trial Judiciary and that military judge will set the date for Manning's arraignment, motion hearings and trial," the army statement said.

Manning is also accused of stealing public property or records, transmitting defense information and of committing computer fraud. » | Friday, February 03, 2012

Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Exclusive TV Series Hosted by Julian Assange to Premiere on RT in March


Read article here | Wednesday, January 25, 2012

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WikiLeaks: Rights to Julian Assange Chat Show Bought by Russian TV

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has chosen a Kremlin-bankrolled satellite TV channel known for its relentless anti-Western propaganda to broadcast his new talk show.

RT, a Moscow-based channel formerly known as Russia Today, said on Wednesday it had secured exclusive first broadcast rights for Mr Assange’s new 10-part interview show ‘The World Tomorrow.’

“Details of the episodes and the guests featured are secret for now,” RT said in a statement, adding it was proud to be associated with the WikiLeaks founder.

On bail in the UK with strict limits on his freedom of movement pending possible extradition to Sweden on sex crime charges he denies, RT said Mr Assange would interview "’iconoclasts, visionaries and power insiders’" – people Assange can clearly identify with, being a rather controversial figure himself.”

“The 40-year-old Australian media and internet entrepreneur will get to talk about the issues of the day with those he believes will shape the world tomorrow. » | Andrew Osborn, Moscow | Wednesday, January 25, 2012

Thursday, January 12, 2012

Bradley Manning Moves Step Closer to Full Court Martial

THE GUARDIAN: Investigating officer in pre-trial hearing recommends that 22 charges against WikiLeaks suspect be referred to military trial

Bradley Manning, the US soldier accused of having been the source of the massive WikiLeaks dump of state secrets, is one step closer towards the possibility of spending the rest of his life in military confinement after the officer who presided over his pre-trial hearing recommended he be sent to a full court martial.

Colonel Paul Almanza, the investigating officer at last month's hearing in Fort Meade, Maryland, has written to his superiors recommending that all 22 charges against Manning be referred to a general court martial – the most serious military trial. An announcement from the military district of Washington said that Almanza had found that "reasonable grounds exist to believe that the accused committed the offenses alleged."

A final decision will be made by colonel Carl Coffman of the special court martial convening authority, though he has the option of passing it further up the chain of command to major general Michael Linnington.

The outcome of the pre-trial hearing means that a full military trial is almost certain to follow, and is likely to be held within the next three to four months. That will set the scene for what promises to be a dramatic clash of wills between the Obama administration and the military high command on the one hand, and Bradley Manning and his forceful defence lawyer David Coombs on the other. » | Ed Pilkington in New York | Thursday, January 12, 2012

Friday, December 16, 2011

The Madness of Bradley Manning?

Bradley Manning, the man held over the leaking of confidential cables to WikiLeaks, was a 'mess of a child' who should never have been put through a tour of duty in Iraq, according to an investigative film produced by the Guardian


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Wikileaks: Bradley Manning Military Hearing Begins

BBC: Defence lawyers representing the US Army analyst accused of leaking government secrets have asked the investigating officer to step aside.

The request came as Private Bradley Manning, 23, appeared at a military court for the first time.

He faces 22 charges of obtaining and distributing government secrets - which he allegedly leaked to anti-secrecy site Wikileaks.

The Article 32 hearing will determine whether Pte Manning is to stand trial.

The hearing offers the first opportunity for his defence team to present their case since he was arrested in Iraq in May 2010 and placed in military custody.

It is taking place under tight security at an army base at Fort Meade, Maryland.

As the hearing opened, Pte Manning's defence team asked for the investigating officer - equivalent to a judge in a civilian court - to withdraw from the case, the BBC's North America editor Mark Mardell reports from the base.

Pte Manning was reported to be sitting in the courtroom dressed in military khaki and wearing black-rimmed glasses.

During the Article 32 hearing, which is similar to a pre-trial hearing, both prosecuting and defence lawyers will make their initial cases and are permitted to cross-examine witnesses.

Proceedings are expected to last around five days, after which recommendations will be made to a military general, who will decide whether to proceed to a full trial, according to his lawyer, David Coombs.

The BBC's Paul Adams says the soldier's defence team is likely to argue that little harm came of the leaks, and that their release was in the greater public interest. » | Mark Mardell, BBC North America editor | Friday, December 16, 2011

THE GUARDIAN: Bradley Manning hearing: defence lawyer turns fire on military accusers: On first day of preliminary hearing, investigating officer rejects defence's demand that he recuse himself » | Ed Pilkington and Matt Williams in Fort Meade | Friday, December 16, 2011

Thursday, December 15, 2011

Whistleblower in Court: US Determined to Punish Bradley Manning

SPIEGEL ONLINE INTERNATIONAL: For some, Bradley Manning is a hero. Others feel that the US soldier, who is accused of providing secret documents to WikiLeaks, is a traitor and a threat to American security. The military proceedings against him, which begin Friday, are likely to end in a guilty verdict.

Daniel Ellsberg knows a few things about heroes. In fact, many Americans see him as a hero. When he was working for a key think tank associated with the United States military, Ellsberg photocopied the so-called Pentagon Papers, 7,000 pages of top secret analysis and documents that revealed that American politicians knew all too well how hopeless the situation in Vietnam was. When the New York Times published the secret documents in 1971, it opened the eyes of Ellsberg's fellow Americans once and for all to the details of a disastrous war.

But when Ellsberg, now 80 and white-haired but still energetic, talks about heroes, he is no longer thinking about the past. Today he says that Bradley Manning, the presumed source of the classified documents about American military officials and diplomats published by WikiLeaks last year, is "unreservedly a hero." There are so many things Manning's actions uncovered, says Ellsberg, as he begins to rattle them off. Could the Arab Spring have materialized without the WikiLeaks reports on the corruption of Arab potentates? And would anyone have been talking about war crimes committed by American soldiers in Iraq without the documents on detainee abuse?

Ellsberg is convinced that like him, Private Manning, who was only 22 at the time, wrote history and, just as in Ellsberg's case, the powerful are now intent on punishing Manning for what he did. Former US President Richard Nixon once threatened to throw Ellsberg into prison. But to the country's highest courts, the truth was more important than government secrecy, and Ellsberg and the Times emerged unscathed. The man who had exposed the government's secrets about Vietnam became the prototype of the whistleblower. Facing Life in Prison » | Marcel Rosenbach and Gregor Peter Schmitz | Thursday, December 15, 2011

Monday, November 21, 2011

Bradley Manning Hearing Date Set as Court Martial Process Finally Begins

THE GUARDIAN: Manning, accused of leaking secrets to WikiLeaks, to go to pre-trial – known as Article 32 hearing – in Maryland next month

Bradley Manning, the US soldier who has been held in confinement for the past 18 months on suspicion of having leaked a huge trove of state secrets to WikiLeaks, is to go before a military panel on 16 December at the start of the most high-profile prosecution of a whistleblower in a generation.

The proceedings, at Fort Meade in Maryland, are expected to last five days, and will be the first opportunity for prosecuting officers and Manning's defence team to present their cases. It is known as an Article 32 hearing, and although it is preliminary, both sides will be able to call and cross-examine witnesses.

Since he was arrested in Iraq in May 2010, Manning has become a cause célèbre for anti-war and free information advocates in America and around the world. His support network will be calling a rally outside the Article 32 hearing when it opens next month. » | Ed Pilkington in New York | Monday, November 21, 2011

Thursday, November 03, 2011

Julian Assange : "Je lui ai appris à dire la vérité" dit sa mère

FRANCE SOIR: Alors que l'extradition vers la Suède du fondateur de WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, a été confirmée mercredi par la Haute Cour de Londres, sa mère annonce ce jeudi qu'il a été « crucifié » pour avoir dit la vérité. Chose qu'elle lui a toujours appris mais à laquelle elle ne croit plus...

Depuis l'Australie, dont Julian Assange est originaire, la mère du fondateur de WikiLeaks met en avant une éducation de la vérité donné à son fils. Selon elle, il est pourchassé pour avoir défendu son idéal de « vérité et de justice ». L'homme qui a fait trembler les Etats-Unis avec les révélations sur son site internet de 250.000 télégrammes diplomatiques américains en novembre 2010 est accusé par deux Suédoises d'avoir eu des relations contraintes et non protégées avec elles en août 2010.

Il a été « crucifié parce qu'il fait ce pour quoi il a été élevé », a poursuivi Christine Assange. « J'ai appris à mon fils à dire la vérité, à croire en la justice. Il a été élevé en pensant vivre dans une démocratie où il devait réparer toute injustice dont il était témoin. Aujourd'hui, je ne crois plus en tout cela », a-t-elle conclu. » | Par Actu France Soir | jeudi 03 novembre 2011

Wednesday, November 02, 2011

WikiLeaks Founder Julian Assange Loses Extradition Battle

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has lost his High Court bid to block extradition to Sweden where he faces sex crime allegations.

Two judges rejected claims that extraditing the 40-year-old Australian would be "unfair and unlawful".

The Swedish authorities want him to answer accusations of "raping" one woman and "sexually molesting and coercing" another in Stockholm in August last year.

Mr Assange, whose WikiLeaks website published a mass of leaked diplomatic cables that embarrassed several governments and international businesses, denies the allegations and says they are politically motivated.

The High Court upheld a ruling by District Judge Howard Riddle at Belmarsh Magistrates' Court, south London, in February that the computer expert should be extradited to face investigation.

Dressed in a sharp, navy blue suit and wearing a Remembrance Day poppy, the world's most famous whistleblower was mobbed as he approached the court building and police had to redirect him away from the crowd. » | Wednesday, November 02, 2011

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Julian Assange Awaits High Court Ruling on Extradition

THE GUARDIAN: WikiLeaks founder will hear on Wednesday if he has won his bid to block extradition to Sweden to face sex crime allegations

The WikiLeaks founder, Julian Assange, is due to appear at the high court in London to find out whether he has won or lost his appeal againstextradition to Sweden to face rape allegations.

Lord Justice Thomas and Mr Justice Ouseley are due to hand down their judgment at 9.45am on Wednesday in the 40-year-old Australian's case against a European arrest warrant issued by Swedish prosecutors after rape and sexual assault accusations made by two Swedish women following his visit to Stockholm in August 2010. » | Press Association | Wednesday, November 02, 2011

Wednesday, October 26, 2011

WikiLeaks cesse ses activités faute d'argent

LE FIGARO: Face à une chute de dons, le site Internet suspend la divulgation de documents secrets. Il accuse Washington de lui imposer un blocus financier en représailles à ses activités.

WikiLeaks est sur la paille. Devenu la bête noire de Washington après la diffusion de câbles diplomatiques américains, le site spécialisé dans la divulgation de documents a été contraint lundi de «suspendre» ses activités faute de fonds.

Pour expliquer la mauvaise situation financière du site basé en Islande, son fondateur Julian Assange a pointé du doigt les géants bancaires Bank of America, Visa, MasterCard, Paypal et Western Union. Ceux-ci ont bloqué depuis fin 2010 les donations au site, qui ont chuté drastiquement. Les dons ont plongé de «plus de 100.000 dollars par mois» (72.000 euros), avant la décision de Visa et de MasterCard, à «6000 ou 7000 dollars» actuellement, a affirmé le porte-parole du site. Un «blocus financier arbitraire et illégal» qui «a détruit 95% de nos revenus», a affirmé Julian Assange. » | Par lefigaro.fr | mardi 25 octobre 2011

Friday, October 14, 2011

Wiki-Whacked - UK

Watch Journeyman Pictures video here

Saturday, May 28, 2011

The Madness of Bradley Manning?

THE GUARDIAN: Bradley Manning, the man held over the leaking of confidential cables to WikiLeaks, was a 'mess of a child' who should never have been put through a tour of duty in Iraq, according to an investigative film produced by the Guardian | Teresa Smith, Maggie O'Kane, Guy Grandjean, Jacqui Timberlake, Jim Hedge, Chavala Madlena, Dan Ramirez, Bill Thomas, Richard Sprenger and Christian Bennett | Friday, May 27, 2011

WikiLeaks Accused Bradley Manning 'Should Never Have Been Sent to Iraq'

Guardian exclusive: Soldier held over US intelligence leak was known to be mentally fragile and unsuited to army life

Watch video here

Read the article here

Sunday, May 08, 2011

«La mosquée de Lyon n’a rien à voir avec les déboires des Américains en Irak»

«Le recteur de la mosquée de Lyon réagit aux documents de Wikileaks qui présentent sa mosquée comme une base du terrorisme

Monday, May 02, 2011

WikiLeaks Revelations Only Tip of Iceberg – Assange

Tuesday, April 26, 2011

Islamist Extremism: So Did We Cure the Problem?

THE DAILY TELEGRAPH: This week's disclosures from WikiLeaks confirm that Britain was a breeding ground for Islamist terrorism. But, 10 years after 9/11, we still pander to extremism, says Andrew Gilligan

The East London Mosque, the largest in Britain, hosted a "live telephone Q&A" with the world's most dangerous al-Qaeda preacher, advertised with a poster showing Manhattan in flames. At the North London Mosque, equally important and well-known, one of the trustees is a supporter, and former leader, of a terrorist organisation. According to the BBC, he "is said to have masterminded much of [its] political and military strategy" from his perch in London.

Over the last few days, the Guantanamo Bay files leaked to this newspaper have shown in compelling detail how Britain became a global hub of terror, with at least 35 inmates of the detention camp radicalised here in the years before 9/11. Yet the two examples I give do not come from the leaked files. They are much more recent. The people who run those two mosques have been in no way troubled by the authorities. In fact, they have been helped by them. At the North London Mosque, the radical activist was actually installed by the police – and remains a trustee. And in the financial year to 2010, the year after it hosted that session with the fundamentalist preacher, the East London Mosque received £660,000 of taxpayers' money – some of it from a Home Office fund for "preventing violent extremism".

There is a reason why Britain, in the words of one French official, is and remains the "Pakistan of the West", an incubator, entrepot and exporter of Islamic radicalism. There is a reason why, according to MI6, we face a "unique" threat from home-grown extremists. There is a reason why Britain is the only country in the Western world to have been subjected to a successful suicide terror attack by its own citizens. These things have happened, in part, because the last government, and Britain's security establishment, got its policy just about as wrong as it was possible to get. We were harsh where we should have been liberal – and liberal where we should have been harsh.

Control orders, the push for three months' detention without charge, random and blanket stop-and-search, and Britain's complicity in torture did little or nothing to restrain terrorism. But they undermined the rule of law for which we are fighting, angered middle-of-the-road Muslims and gave the extremists priceless fuel for their favourite narrative, "Islam under attack". » | Andrew Gilligan | Tuesday, April 16, 2011