[ad_1]

The formal ask comes as the U.S. government is reeling from another significant leak of classified information.
[ad_2]
#group #House #progressives #urging #Justice #Department #drop #charges #extradition #request #Julian #Assange
( With inputs from : www.politico.com )
Tag: Julian

A group of House progressives are urging the Justice Department to drop charges and an extradition request against Julian Assange.

Vivienne Westwood’s son calls for her ‘dear friend’ Julian Assange to be freed
[ad_1]
Dame Vivienne Westwood’s son has called for his mother’s “dear friend” Julian Assange to be freed during an address at the late designer’s memorial.
In a tribute delivered from the pulpit at Southwark Cathedral, the activist Joseph Corré praised his mother’s clothes, their relationship and her legacy. “To Vivienne, punk was a political idea not a social one,” he said, before criticising the “trumped up accusations from a corrupt establishment” that had meant that, despite the family’s best efforts, Assange was not present at the service.
In a memorial that was equal parts political statement and fashion veneration, several hundred guests from both camps turned up to celebrate the life and political legacy of the designer, style icon and environmental activist who died on 29 December aged 81.
Among the speakers were the former Greenpeace executive director John Sauven, who praised Westwood’s efforts to bring attention to the climate crisis and environmentalism.
Westwood’s second husband, Andreas Kronthaler, whom she married in 1993 after they met when she was teaching fashion design at the University of Applied Arts Vienna, where Kronthaler was a student, also spoke. Wearing a Westwood kilt suit, the designer and creative director of her company was visibly moved as he recalled their secret trysts in the late 80s.
Helena Bonham Carter also delivered a eulogy in which she described herself as a “Westwood worshipper”, and attempted to incite Kate Moss into declaring a national day of dressing up as Westwood. The actor said she had “an obscene amount of clothes, which Vivienne would not have liked with her ‘buy less’ manifesto”.

Helena Bonham Carter wore a red Westwood two-piece. Photograph: Neil Mockford/GC Images She also recalled buying a Westwood pirate shirt aged 15 so she could look like Adam Ant, and said she always wore the designer’s coquette dresses (she owns seven) to red carpet events. “They are instant body engineering, an aesthetic protest,” Bonham Carter said. They also meant she could have “a full-fat English breakfast” before getting dressed. “If it wasn’t for Vivienne, I’d be naked.”
The Rev Andrew Nunn praised the turnout, revealing that King Charles and the queen consort had been “unexpectedly” due to attend (it is thought they cancelled on health grounds). Westwood designed her polemic God Save the Queen T-shirts in protest at the silver jubilee, but later accepted an OBE.
Sitting on the second row for perhaps the first time in their collective careers were the Vogue editor, Edward Enninful, the US Vogue editor, Anna Wintour, designers Victoria Beckham and Marc Jacobs, and Westwood muse Kate Moss. Also in attendance were Christina Hendricks in a tartan wrap coat, Joely Richardson and Vanessa Redgrave in camel-coloured jackets, Stormzy in a black suit and Richard E Grant wearing a fascinator.
The guests mostly wore black and plaid versions of Westwood creations, though a dress code – which was sent to everyone and based on Westwood’s mantra of “If in doubt, dress up!” – was closely followed by guests in “mini-crinolines” and clan tartans, which shaped her most famous work.
Jonathan Ross wore a No Future blue jumper by Westwood, Bob Geldof was in head-to-toe Westwood beige tartan, Zandra Rhodes wore a red jumpsuit and leather jacket, and Bonham Carter came in a red Westwood two-piece she had previously worn to collect her CBE.
The cathedral was decked out in Highland-inspired bouquets dotted with mimosa. The service began with Abba’s Slipping Through My Fingers played by the Arnfield Brass, a band situated just over the river from the Derbyshire village of Tintwistle, where Westwood grew up.
In between the eulogies and tributes, Nick Cave performed a moving rendition of Into My Arms at a grand piano, and Chrissie Hynde sang Raining In My heart, which she dedicated to “her friend”. Hynde met Westwood while working at her Kings Road shop, Sex, in the early 1970s.

(From left) Vanessa Redgrave, Joely Richardson and Nick Cave leave the memorial service. Photograph: Jeff Spicer/Getty Images Speaking in a filmed tribute months before her death, Westwood said activism was her priority, and fashion was her therapy: “I just liked doing it,” she said. Corre also revealed that Westwood had been working on a book before her death, and that she had also become a follower of Taoism, though he added the designer “was not a religious person”.
Often described as the enfant terrible of the fashion world, Westwood burst on to the fashion scene in the 1970s, dressing Adam Ant and the Sex Pistols in leather jackets, pirate shirts and safety pins. She later moved into catwalk and couture, creating bustles and corsets for red carpets and celebrities, later leveraging her status to promote various causes.
Her clothes sometimes featured activist slogans, and despite participating with the fashion week calendar, she often urged her customers to buy less, not more. In a 2017 collection she showed a unisex line of trousers, hats and capes in the hope that men and women would share the same clothes.
The memorial took place at the start of London fashion week, which was dedicated to the late designer and her legacy. “Her work not only changed the fashion industry, giving birth to and defining punk, but it also drove positive change globally,” said Davina Wedderburn of the British Fashion Council. “It’s only right that we celebrate her.”
A small funeral took place on 9 January in Tintwistle. According to the Herald, the family decorated the church with Harris tweed cushions.
“She started a punk and ended a dame, without compromising an inch,” said Bonham Carter. “She was a true feminist.”
[ad_2]
#Vivienne #Westwoods #son #calls #dear #friend #Julian #Assange #freed
( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
Julian Sands: helicopter search under way for missing actor
[ad_1]
The search for British actor Julian Sands continues nearly a week after he was reported missing while hiking in a treacherous area of California’s San Gabriel Mountains, where at least two other hikers have already perished this winter.
The search for the 65-year-old actor is currently being conducted “via helicopter only”, the San Bernardino county sheriff’s department said Friday afternoon, because the risk of avalanches around Mt Baldy has continued to make on-the-ground rescue efforts too dangerous.
There is currently no timeline for ending the search for Sands, department spokesperson Gloria Huerta said on Friday.
The Mt Baldy bowl area where Sands was hiking has been a deadly one this winter, with at least two hikers killed in the area after falling and injuring themselves in the past month, according to the sheriff’s department.
One of the two hikers who died, identified by local media as Crystal Paula Gonzalez, was an experienced hiker, known to family and friends as “the hiking queen,” CBS News Los Angeles reported. Authorities said that Gonzalez, who had previously summited Mt Whitney, one of the highest peaks in the United States, slipped and fell more than 500ft while hiking on 8 January, and died of her injuries on the mountain.
Search and rescue teams have responded to more than two dozen different incidents of lost or injured hikers in the Mt Baldy area over the past month, with authorities this week warning even experienced hikers to stay away from the mountain during “extremely dangerous” conditions.
Sands, an avid hiker and longtime resident of the Los Angeles area, was reported missing around 7.30pm last Friday. Pings from his cell phone logged in subsequent days only showed his movements on 13 January, the sheriff’s department said late Friday.
Initial ground and helicopter searches of one of his possible locations that day did not locate any evidence of Sands, the department said. Further analysis of Sands’ cell phone location data is ongoing, but, “Thus far, no workable leads have been developed”, the department said.
At this point, there is no data that indicates Sands’ whereabouts after Friday, the day he was reported missing, Huerta said. His vehicle was located in the Mt Baldy area, and has been towed by his family, she said.
“Additional air searches will be conducted,” the department said.

A view of Mt San Antonio, also known as Mt Baldy, in the San Gabriel mountains near Los Angeles. Photograph: Mark A Johnson/Alamy As California has been buffeted by winter storms, weather conditions in the mountain have inhibited attempts to assist missing and injured hikers, including Sands. Rescue crews looking for Sands on the ground had to be pulled off the mountain on Saturday night because of the dangerous weather. Weather conditions also inhibited the efforts to evacuate Gonzalez, the injured hiker, off the mountain to a hospital, a medic told CBS News Los Angeles. She left behind five children, the news outlet reported.
More than 21 people have died across California in the storms of the past few weeks, and others, including a five-year-old boy swept away in flood waters, remain missing.
Sands, who is known for his roles in The Killing Fields, A Room with a View, and Naked Lunch, has lived in the Los Angeles area for years with his wife, the writer Eugenia Citkowitz, with whom he has a son. He also has two daughters with former Evening Standard and BBC Radio 4 Today program editor Sarah Sands, to whom he was married from 1984 to 1987.
Other Hollywood actors, writers and producers, have posted their prayers for Sands and his family on social media, praising him as an inspiration and a friend.
“Keep candles burning for his safe return from the mountain he loves,” actor Matthew Modine wrote on Twitter.
[ad_2]
#Julian #Sands #helicopter #search #missing #actor
( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )
Biden accused of hypocrisy as he seeks extradition of Julian Assange
[ad_1]
Joe Biden has been accused of hypocrisy for demanding the release of journalists detained around the world while the US president continues seeking the extradition of the WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange from Britain to face American espionage charges.
The campaign to pressure the Biden administration to drop the charges moved to Washington DC on Friday with a hearing of the Belmarsh Tribunal, an ad hoc gathering of legal experts and supporters named after the London prison where Assange is being detained.
The hearing was held in the same room where Assange in 2010 exposed the “collateral murder” video showing US aircrew gunning down Iraqi civilians, the first of hundreds of thousands of leaked secret military documents and diplomatic cables published in major newspapers around the world. The revelations about America’s wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, including alleged war crimes, and the frank assessments of US diplomats about their host governments, caused severe embarrassment in Washington.
The tribunal heard that the charges against Assange were an “ongoing attack on press freedom” because the WikiLeaks founder was not a spy but a journalist and publisher protected by free speech laws.
The tribunal co-chairperson Srecko Horvat – a founder of the Democracy in Europe Movement 2025 whose father was a political prisoner in the former Yugoslavia – quoted Biden from the 2020 presidential campaign calling for the release of imprisoned journalists across the world by quoting late president Thomas Jefferson’s dictum that “our liberty depends on the freedom of the press, and that cannot be limited without being lost”.
“President Biden is normally advocating freedom of press, but at the same time continuing the persecution of Julian Assange,” Horvat said.
Horvat warned that continuing the prosecution could serve as a bad example to other governments.
“This is an attack on press freedom globally – that’s because the United States is advancing what I think is really the extraordinary claim that it can impose its criminal secrecy laws on a foreign publisher who was publishing outside the United States,” he said.
“Every country has secrecy laws. Some countries have very draconian secrecy laws. If those countries tried to extradite New York Times reporters and publishers to those countries for publishing their secrets we would cry foul and rightly so. Does this administration want to be the first to establish the global precedent that countries can demand the extradition of foreign reporters and publishers for violating their own laws?”
Assange faces 18 charges over WikiLeaks’ publication of classified documents, largely the result of a leak by the former US army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning. Manning was sentenced to 35 years in prison but released after President Barack Obama commuted her sentence in 2017. Manning has testified that she acted on her own initiative in sending the documents to WikiLeaks and not at the urging of Assange.
The tribunal heard that the accuracy of the information published by WikiLeaks, including evidence of war crimes and human rights abuses, was not in question.
Assange is a polarising figure who has fallen out with many of the news organisations with whom he has worked, including the Guardian and New York Times. He lost some support when he broke his bail conditions in 2012 and sought refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London to avoid extradition to Sweden to face questioning over sexual assault allegations.
The US justice department brought charges against Assange in 2019 when he was expelled by the Ecuadorians from their embassy.
Assange fought a lengthy legal battle in the British courts against extradition to the US after his arrest, but lost. Last year, the then-home secretary, Priti Patel, approved the extradition request. Assange has appealed, claiming that he is “being prosecuted and punished for his political opinions”.
Assange’s father, John Shipton, condemned his son’s “ceaseless malicious abuse”, including the conditions in which he is held in Britain. He said the UK’s handling of the case was “an embarrassment” that damaged the country’s claim to stand for free speech and the rule of law.
Lawyer Jeffrey Sterling, a former CIA employee who was imprisoned under the Espionage Act for revealing defence secrets to the journalist James Risen, told the Belmarsh Tribunal that Assange has little chance of a fair trial in the US.
He said: “It is virtually impossible to defend against the Espionage Act. Truth is no defence. In fact, any defence related to truth will be prohibited. In addition, he won’t have access to any of the so-called evidence used against him.
“The Espionage Act has not been used to fight espionage. It’s being used against whistleblowers and Julian Assange to keep the public ignorant of [the government’s] wrongdoings and illegalities in order to maintain its hold on authority, all in the name of national security.”
The tribunal also heard from Britain’s former Labour party leader Jeremy Corbyn, who said the continued prosecution of Assange would make all journalists afraid to reveal secrets.
“If Julian Assange ends up in a maximum security prison in the United States for the rest of his life, every other journalist around the world will think, ‘Should I really report this information I’ve been given? Should I really speak out about this denial of human rights or miscarriage of justice in any country?’” he said.
[ad_2]
#Biden #accused #hypocrisy #seeks #extradition #Julian #Assange
( With inputs from : www.theguardian.com )




