Wikileaks founder Julian Assange took shelter in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London one year ago Wednesday, sparking a standoff with UK authorities that could leave the world-renowned whistleblower cooped up for years to come.
When Assange first made his asylum bid 365 days ago, the tense
standoff that ensued seemed likely to ignite an international
incident.
British authorities “warned” Ecuador that they could raid its embassy and arrest Julian Assange if he was not handed over, a move the Ecuadorian Foreign Minister charged would be a “flagrant violation” of international law.
Although the situation has significantly calmed since then, the
UK’s commitment to arresting Assange remains unwavering.
Britain has vowed it will do everything in its power to block Assange’s passage to Ecuador despite being granted asylum by Quito in August 2012. Downing Street commitment to securing Assange’s extradition to Sweden, where is wanted for questioning over sex crime allegations by two women, has manifested itself in a year-long police presence outside of the embassy building in Knightsbridge, London. As of Wednesday, the Telegraph estimates that the policing the Ecuadorian Embassy has cost British taxpayers in excess of $6.6 million dollars.
Following talks between Ecuador’s Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino and his British counterpart William Hague on Monday, both sides agreed to keep the channels of communication open, but “no breakthrough” was made on the Assange case.
Patino said he remained in good spirits despite his limited
living accommodations which Assange likened to living in a space
station.
The Ecuadorean government stood by its decision to grant Assange asylum, vowing there would be no changes in his circumstances.
Patino met with Assange on Sunday and said that, despite his ordeal, he remains in good spirits.
“I got to tell him for the first time, face-to-face, that the
government of Ecuador maintains its firm decision to protect his
human rights,” Patino said. The Wikileaks founder expressed
his willingness to spend the next half-decade cooped up in the
basement room of a building which he described as so dim, he
utilizes a lamp mimicking blue sky, set to a timer, least he work
all night, the Guardian’s Esther Addley reports.
But with a steady stream of supporters providing him amenities, a
personal trainer, a treadmill and high speed Internet, Assange
believes five years in those conditions are vastly preferable to
the alternatives.
His detractors believe he is using his notoriety to escape the Swedish justice system. Assange, in writing to Ecuadorian President Rafael Correa one year ago, said he was being persecuted and could not return to his native Australia, fearing he could be extradited to "a foreign country that applies the death penalty for the crime of espionage and sedition."
Ecuador concluded “his fears are legitimate.”
Assange claims the same imperilment been the driving force behind
his decision to avoid returning to Sweden for questioning. He has
previously expressed his willingness to answer queries from
Swedish investigators on condition that he receives strong
guarantees that he won’t be extradited the United States, where
he believes he will be tried for his role in the 2010 US
diplomatic cables leak – the largest such disclosure in the
country’s history. Those guarantees have not been forthcoming.
Despite his willingness to remain in limbo, Assange believes the US is softening towards his plight, claiming a deal could be reached between Ecuador and the UK which would see him finally step foot outside of the embassy “within a year.”
“I think the position in the UK is softening,” he told the AFP news agency. “Of course, it will never publicly humiliate the United States by offering me safe passage in a manner that doesn’t seem to be forced.”
The anniversary comes as the US authorities are hot on the tracks of Edward Snowden, the former CIA employee responsible for leaking details of the National Security Agency’s massive Internet surveillance program PRISM.
“Mr Snowden is as good an example of a hero as any. He has performed an extremely courageous act," Assange said lauding him for exposing America's "creeping mass surveillance state".
"What we don't want to see is him ending up the same way as Bradley Manning -- detained without trial, abused in prison and now facing life imprisonment."
While Assange is seeking to flee the UK, he believes “The British Government should be offering Mr Snowden asylum, not excluding him from their borders.”
“I am sure if you asked the people of the UK what they wanted, they would be in favor of protecting Mr Snowden. The UK doesn’t want to say no to the US under any circumstances – not in my case, and not in the case of Mr Snowden,” he continued.
If Snowden ever made his way to the single story mansion black just around the corner from Harrods department store, he might find more than one supporter.
“If he [Snowden] wants to ask asylum from the Ecuadoran government, he can do it,” Patino said from London on Monday, “and we, of course, would analyze it.”