Sweden says it won't hand Julian Assange to a third country if there was a risk he would face the death penalty there.
UK Pirate Party Loz Kaye thinks these assurances don't have legal binding nature.
UK Pirate Party Loz Kaye thinks these assurances don't have legal binding nature.
Several British governmental websites, including the Ministry of
Justice, have been attacked by hacktivists in retaliation for Britain’s
handling of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
Under the campaign, which was branded “#OpFreeAssange,” Anonymous
undertook a mission to take down justice.gov.uk and number10.gov.uk, the
official site of the British Prime Minister’s Office. The websites are
now operating normally once again.
Several Twitter accounts
associated with the loose-knit Anonymous collective have acknowledged
that the UK Ministry of Justice and the PM Office's websites had been
targeted with a distributed denial-of-service, or DDoS, attack.
“#OpFreeAssange: TANGO DOWN! http://www.justice.gov.uk/ [500 Internal Server Error] [#Anonymous #WikiLeaks],” reads one tweet sent from the @Anon_Central Twitter account.
The
hackers also claim to have taken down the website of another British
government department – the Department of Work and Pensions. “Gov. of UK Expect Us!” reads a related tweet by Anonymous.
Assange,
the founder and editor of whistleblower website WikiLeaks, has been
ordered by Swedish authorities to be extradited from the UK where he had
been under house arrest. Two women from Sweden have accused Assange of
sex crimes, although he has yet to be charged.
In fear of being
sent to Sweden and then extradited to the US to be tried for his role
with WikiLeaks, Assange applied for political asylum in Ecuador, which
the Latin American country finally granted him last week after two
months of waiting. Regardless, British authorities have refused to give
Assange safe passage out of the Ecuadorian Embassy in London so that he
may travel overseas.
Before Ecuador President Rafael Correa
approved the asylum bid, British authorities threatened to storm the
embassy last week, prompting supporters of Assange and WikiLeaks to
surround the building overnight in hopes of deterring any attempt by the
UK to follow through with the extradition.
“If the UK did not
throw away the Vienna conventions the other night, it is because the
world was watching. And the world was watching because you were
watching,” Assange told his supporters during his Sunday afternoon speech from London.
“So,
the next time somebody tells you that it is pointless to defend those
rights that we hold dear, remind them of your vigil in the dark before
the Embassy of Ecuador."
In addition to lambasting the
British for coming close to violating international law, Assange asked
for US President Barack Obama to “do the right thing” and end
his war on whistleblowing, saluting accused WikiLeaks contributor
Private First Class Bradley Manning as a hero whose release from prison
must be made immediately. Source
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