Prosecution of Assange ‘politically motivated’: Euro rights body
STRASBOURG, France: The prosecution of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange was “politically motivated” and had a “chilling” effect on the whole media landscape, the parliamentary arm of pan-European rights body the Council of Europe said on Wednesday.
Assange, whose site had published thousands of leaked diplomatic cables, won freedom in June after more than five years behind bars in a British prison when he pleaded guilty to a charge under the US espionage act.
Addressing the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) on Tuesday in his first public comments since his release, Assange said he had “pleaded guilty to journalism”.
The resolution passed by PACE´s lawmakers, parliamentarians from the 46 member states of the Council of Europe, said Assange had suffered “more than a decade of politically motivated prosecution for his journalistic work.”
It warned that the “disproportionately harsh treatment” of Assange “creates a dangerous, chilling effect and a climate of self-censorship affecting all journalists”.
The resolution was passed to loud applause in the chamber with 88 for, 13 against and 20 abstentions. Assange, accompanied by his wife Stella and Wikileaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson, saluted the chamber and raised a fist in triumph from the public gallery.
-
Social Media Addiction ‘like Smoking’: Mumsnet Calls For Under-16s Ban With Cigarette-style Warnings -
Andrew Mountbatten, Virginia Giuffre's Photos Attached To Buckingham Palace Gates -
Everything We Know About Bruce Willis Frontotemporal Dementia -
Singapore's Grab Plans AI-driven Expansion And New Services To Boost Profit By 2028 -
Adele Reveals How She 'snapped Out Of' Sever Postpartum Depression -
‘Chinamaxxing’ Explained: Inside Viral Gen Z Trend Taking Over TikTok And Instagram -
Fears Erupt About Sarah Ferguson Pulling A ‘Harry’ While Sitting On A King’s Ransom: ‘Her Leverage Still Stands’ -
Lisa Rinna Slams Andy Cohen For His Below The Belt Move: 'So Shady' -
Stunning New Photos Of The Milky Way Shed Light On How Stars Are Formed -
Prince Harry, Meghan Face Fresh Calls To Lose Royal Titles Over ‘pseudo-royal’ Visit -
Gordon Ramsay On His Basal Cell Carcinoma Diagnosis -
Fukushima Decommissioning: Japan Deploys Snake-like Robot To Remove Nuclear Debris -
Brenda Song Turns Macaulay Culkin's 'Home Alone' Into 'terrible' Lesson: 'Children Have To Be A Little Scared' -
MrBeast Vows To Book Only Starlink-equipped Flights As Global Airline Adoption Surges -
Kim Jong Un Says North Korea Ready To ‘get Along’ With US But Sets Key Condition -
Andrew Fears What Comes Next As Jeffrey Epstein Scandal Deepens