Julian Assange Removed From Embassy, Charged By US Justice Department

Australia’s foreign minister, Marise Payne, has been asked by reporters about Julian Assange.

She says that Assange, as an Australian citizen, will receive consular assistance, as any other citizen would if facing arrest in a foreign country and that consular representatives will meet with Assange today.

Payne was asked whether the Australian government would seek guarantees that Assange would not be extradited to a state where he might face the death penalty. She said that while Australia continues to vehemently oppose the death penalty, Assange’s potential extradition to the US is an issue between the UK and the US.

The charges that led to Julian Assange’s arrest have nothing to do with the 2016 presidential election or the Mueller investigation into Donald Trump’s Russian ties, but the extradition case and Assange’s possible arrival in the US will be electrified by all those unresolved issues.

“I know nothing about Wikileaks. It’s not my thing,” Donald Trump told reporters asking for a reaction to the arrest. That is not what he said on the campaign, when he frequently praised the organisation that Assange founded, and which arguably played an important role in getting Trump elected.

Assange’s role in 2016 cut like a meat cleaver through the administration, dividing Trump loyalists on the far right – who see him as a hero persecuted by the “deep state” – from the traditional conservatives who portray him as nothing less than a Kremlin accomplice.

Read further:

READ MORE HERE