WikiLeaks Brings Its Case to Latin America

After a wave of leftist electoral victories in the region, WikiLeaks is working to build political support to urge the U.S. government to drop its charges against the imprisoned publisher, Anish R M reports. 

Julian Assange outside the Royal Court of Justice in London, July 13, 2011. (acidpolly/Flickr)

By Anish R M
Peoples Dispatch

A delegation from Wikileaks is on a tour across Latin America to drum up support from various social movements and progressive governments in the region to call for Julian Assange’s release.

The delegation consisting of Kristinn Hrafnsson, editor-in-chief of Wikileaks, and Joseph Farrell, journalist and Wikileaks ambassador, are set to finish their Brazil leg of the tour on Wednesday. 

They visited Colombia between Nov. 22 and 24, where they met with the leftist President Gustavo Petro and Colombian Foreign Minister Alvaro Leyva Duran as part of their larger campaign to organize international solidarity for Assange.

Hrafnsson, in a press release, said he was “extremely content with the outcome of the meeting” and that Petro and Duran showed “their commitment and support for Julian Assange’s freedom, and strongly recognized the implications for press freedom worldwide that Assange’s extradition would set.”

From left: WikiLeaks’ Joseph Farrell and Kristinn Hrafnsson with Colombian President Gustavo Petro and Foreign Minister Alvaro Leyva Duran in Bogota on Nov. 21. (Assange Defense)

He added that both Petro and Duran assured their assistance in raising awareness among Latin American leaders and to “collectively and individually urge the Biden administration to drop the charges brought by the Trump administration and grant Assange his long overdue freedom.”

[Related: Major Newspapers Push US to Drop Assange Charges]

In Brazil, Hrafnsson met with President-Elect Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva. Da Silva is already one of the most prominent political leaders to defend the imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher.

In September 2020, Lula published an op-ed in The Guardian calling Assange a “champion of democracy” and called for his immediate, unconditional release. Now that da Silva is back on the world stage as an elected president, the delegation hopes to secure a similar commitment.

Brazil’s President-Elect Lula Da Silva, center, on Nov. 17 at the COP27 meeting in Sharm el-Sheikh, Egypt. (UNclimatechange, Flickr)

Apart from a meeting with Lula, the two are also expected to meet with civil society groups, trade unions, federations and journalist guilds to raise solidarity for Assange and to campaign for the right to information.

The visit to Brazil is being coordinated by the International Peoples’ Assembly that the two will be joining across Latin America with political and social leaders, movements, organized civil society and all those who support Assange’s release.

Press Event in Rio de Janeiro

They are expected to participate in an event at the Brazilian Press Association (ABI) in Rio de Janeiro, where they will meet with representatives of Union of Journalists of São Paulo, Reporter Without Borders (RSF), Instituto Vladimir Herzog, Artigo 19, Network for the Protection of Journalists and Communicators in Brazil, Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), National Federation of Journalists (FENAJ), Brazilian Association of Investigative Journalism (Abraji), Tornavoz, Association of Digital Journalism (Ajor), Intervozes, and National Forum for the Democratization of Communication (FNDC).

“Without strong international mobilization, journalist Julian Assange will not be released,” declared Giovani del Prete, a member of the secretariat of the International People’s Assembly, underscoring the need to mount international pressure against the U.S. persecution of Assange.

“By publishing thousands of documents, photos, and videos on WikiLeaks that prove the involvement of the United States and its allies in the killing of innocents and in espionage on an international scale, Assange fulfilled his duty as a journalist. That’s why the fight for (Assange’s) freedom affects all of us.”

WikiLeaks‘ Editor-in-Chief Kristinn Hrafnsson addressing the press in London on Jan. 24; Stella Assange is on his right. (Alisdare Hickson, Flickr, CC BY-SA 2.0)

“WikiLeaks representatives intend to speak about the risks that exist for democracy and press freedom if Assange is extradited to the United States,” the organization said.

Assange is currently facing extradition to the U.S. to stand trial before a federal grand jury on a total of 18 charges, 17 of which are under the notorious Espionage Act, carrying a total maximum prison sentence of 175 years.

He is being held under judicial remand at the high-security Belmarsh prison in the United Kingdom, as he awaits an appeal against the British Home Office’s decision to extradite him to the United States.

In his interview with Folha de São Paulo, Hrafnsson emphasized the hopelessness of the judicial process at the moment. “We are giving up the official battle,” Hrafnsson said. “Julian has been fighting in the courts, but throughout this process, we understand that this is not a legal case. The laws are distorted, the whole framework rests on a foundation of public harassment.”

According to reports, the duo are expecting to hold meetings with at least seven of the region’s leftist leaders, in the light of a recent wave of leftist electoral victories. In the interview with Folha, Hrafnsson also pointed out how recent political events present an opportunity. “I would be a hypocrite if I didn’t say that we are looking to take advantage of this window of change,” he told Folha.

“It is extremely urgent that we build political support at all levels to urge the U.S. government to stop this — not just the extradition request, but all charges.”

“Latin America is at an important crossroads. There are winds of change, and we have decided that this is the right time to knock on doors and ask politicians to come and support us. It’s time to put pressure on the (Joe Biden) administration and tell them to back off,” the WikiLeaks editor-in-chief told Folha.

Anish R M is a correspondent for Peoples Dispatch.

This article is from Peoples Dispatch.