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WikiLeaks Calls For Assange To Step Down

Stoobalou writes "A member of Iceland's parliament and prominent organizer for whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks has turned on the site's spokesman, Julian Assange, urging him to step down over rape allegations made against him in Sweden. Birgitta Jonsdottir told news site The Daily Beast that she did not believe Assange's repeated assertion that the allegations of rape and molestation made against him were part of a US-backed smear campaign to distract attention from documents posted on the site laying bare US involvement in the war in Afghanistan and further promised revelations."

22 of 565 comments (clear)

  1. Re:Price by the+linux+geek · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The blind faith many people seem to put in Assange confuses the hell out of me. He pissed off the United States, so any and all allegations against him are automatically baseless? By those standards, all anti-US terrorists in US history are automatically innocent.

  2. Re:Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    The blind faith many people seem to put in Assange confuses the hell out of me. He pissed off the United States, so any and all allegations against him are automatically baseless? By those standards, all anti-US terrorists in US history are automatically innocent.

    Its not blind faith, it just shows how little we all seem to trust the US when so many of us are quick to assume that a rape allegation against an individual the US would clearly like to silence is an attempt to smear their reputation.

  3. Re:Price by nacturation · · Score: 5, Interesting

    By those standards, all anti-US terrorists in US history are automatically innocent.

    You mean until proven guilty? Or do you think anyone the US labels as an enemy should be considered automatically guilty and get locked away indefinitely with no habeas corpus rights?

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  4. Re:Price by Seumas · · Score: 5, Insightful

    I know civics education in this country is complete shit, but I do seem to recall something about how we afford people the presumption of innocence until they are proven guilty in a court of law. For all we know, this woman is behind manufacturing accusations against Assange so that she can step in.

    I'm not accusing her of doing so. I'm simply saying that she could just as well be using it as a tool for manipulation. The guy could be a complete jack-ass for all I know. I also know that it has no impact on the value of the service he started and the information that he has revealed through it.Dismantling him doesn't invalidate that knowledge.

    It is sad that mere accusations are enough to demand that people step down from just about anything. His life is going to be forever altered for the simple fact that he was accused, even if there ends up being no basis for it. Even if it turns out that it was just the manufactured story of a ruthless reporter and a pissed off chick.

    Considering the stories we hear all the time these days about how such accusations are often entirely fictional -- such as "I ditched a night out with my friends for drinks with this guy I met, so to deal with their scrutiny over me ditching them, I invented a story of rape and got a man jailed for a crime he was innocent of", I am not willing to ever assume guilt whatsoever.

    http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-1206325/Woman-rape-allegation-faces-jail.html

    http://gothamist.com/2010/02/24/woman_who_lied_about_rape_sentenced.php

    Just because you may hate anyone who questions the United States of Amuricah, because they're freedom-hating assholes who want our heroic baby-rescuing, never-in-the-wrong troops to die . . . doesn't mean they're also guilty of rape or any crime.

  5. Re:Price by AnonymousClown · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or how often wacky chicks just accuse famous people for their own narcissistic reasons.

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  6. Re:Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Or how people with an inflated sense of self worth think they can do whatever they please with no consequences.

  7. Re:Price by Jedi+Alec · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Considering the fact that "wikileaks founder Assange accused of rape" made headline news across the bloody planet...did he really have a choice?

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  8. Comment from Birgitta Facebook page... by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Informative

    Birgitta Jónsdóttir
    things are being very seriously taken out of context... i think it is important to note that i am not suggesting that julian steps aside except as a spokesperson for wikileaks while this case is ongoing - it is important the messenger wont ...become the message - as it seems then it is obvious that weaving together personal matters of this nature with wikileaks is not justifiable - as someone that has put effort into better support for rape victims and battered women i feel it would be out of character to write the allegations off in this case as a conspiracy - if people find me to be a traitor for not taking sides on such serious matter then so be it. i do not claim that Julian or the women are guilty or innocent until we have all the facts.

    So she's saying that Assange should temporarily step aside as spokesman for Wikileaks until the facts of the case have been sorted out. Not quite the earth-shattering denunciation the media has hyped, huh? Of course, I don't see how she couldn't anticipate this kind of reaction from all of Wikileaks detractors in the media. That was just naive.

  9. Re:Does the US-backed smear campaign include /.? by mml · · Score: 5, Informative

    It sounds like you've missed the latest turn in the sequence of the prosecutor flip flopping. Here's a recap:

        20. August 2010: Duty prosecutor Maria Häljebo Kjellstrand decides it looks like rape
        21. August 2010: Higher ranking prosecutor Eva Finné decides it doesn't
          1. September 2010: Chief prosecutor Marianne Ny decides actually it does look like rape

    Source #1: http://www.thelocal.se/28704/20100901/
    Source #2: http://www.aklagare.se/In-English/

  10. Re:Price by IgnoramusMaximus · · Score: 5, Insightful

    When it comes to national security, nothing is sacred, unfortunately.

    Unfortunately this very idea was the core modus operandi of the Nazi Germany and the Soviet Union both.

    It was also supposed to be the differentiating factor between them and the so-called "principled democracies", USA chief amongst them.

    So much for all the propaganda and bullshit, eh?

  11. *Everybody* is guilty of something ... by tomhudson · · Score: 5, Interesting

    A member of Iceland's parliament and prominent organiser for whistle-blowing website WikiLeaks has turned on the site's founder, Julian Assange, demanding that he step down over rape allegations made against him in Sweden.

    Jonsdottir, who speaks Swedish, said that she had reviewed Swedish police records and disputed Assange's claim that the allegations were politically motivated, suggesting instead that they may be the result of cultural misunderstanding.

    How is it that a politician is reviewing the evidence in an ongoing police case and furthermore, commenting on it in public? In most civilized countries that would be cause for an investigation into the police, and the firing of the prosecutor for not running a tight ship with a clear separation between the judiciary and the executive brances.

    This doesn't pass the "smell test." Not one bit.

    Did Assange do anything wrong? I don't know - but this sort of tampering by politicians makes it sure seem like someone, somewhere, *is* out to get him.

    1. Re:*Everybody* is guilty of something ... by hannson · · Score: 5, Insightful
      Check her bio; she's an activist that went into politics after the economic crisis in Iceland in 2009. She's also a Wikileaks spokeswoman in relations to the collateral murder case so I doubt her being an Icelandic politician has anything to do with her interest in Assanges rape allegations in Sweden.

      These personal matters shoudl have nothing to do with WikiLeaks. I have strongly urged him to focus on the legalities that he's dealing with and let some other people carry the torch.

      I don't think that's an unfair request given the allegations he's facing at the moment.

    2. Re:*Everybody* is guilty of something ... by base_chakra · · Score: 5, Informative

      Having read the article, I see a significant discrepancy between the headline and the text.

      Jonsdottir is doing more than "commenting as an... activist". She presumes to speak in behalf of the WikiLeaks network, although her assertions are not corroborated on wikileaks.org.

      Wikileaks.org is the mouthpiece of the organization. In the WikiLeaks spirit of full disclosure of primary documents, see the WikiLeaks blog post dated 21 August, 2010 (which, at this writing, remains the most recent).

      Also, Jonsdottir cites no empirical "reason to think" the accusation is plausible. When evaluating statements in the media, we must all think critically rather than prejudicially. Look beyond the claims to the evidence.

    3. Re:*Everybody* is guilty of something ... by tmmagee · · Score: 5, Informative

      The police report was leaked.

  12. Re:Not enough info by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Informative

    There is a bit of a problem with not enough information about this case, so I'll try to summary what I know so far.

    1: Two women who had sex with Assange went to the police and were adviced to file charges of rape
    2: A prosecutor releases the accusations publicly to the press (not a common thing here in Sweden afaik)
    3: The case is withdrawn because they realize Assange cannot be nailed for rape. The remaining charge is something akin to sexual harassment.
    4: The rape charges are revived
    5: ...
    6: Profit?

    No seriously I'm starting to wonder what the fuck is up with the swedish legal system.

    ftfa: "He acknowledges that the allegations might complicate his plans to obtain a residency permit to remain in Sweden, which has broad press freedom laws that could be used to shield WikiLeaks from American prosecutors. "

    You want to have legal protection in Sweden? We'll give you legal TROUBLES in Sweden! Your move, skinny boy.

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  13. Re:the man has boundary issues by Cwix · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Everything Ive read said the charge is because the woman claimed he broke the condom on purpose.

    That is not rape.. that is her being too dry, an expired condom, or a non latex condom.

    Ive used many condoms in my day, I'm not even sure how one would "break" the condom on purpose while its in use. I suppose its possible that the condom was tampered with prior to being used but that kinda implies that he intended to break before hand.

    I think the women found out about each other.. found they wern't exclusive, and decided to muck things up as best as possible.

    --
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  14. Re:Price by Scrameustache · · Score: 5, Insightful

    It is sad that mere accusations are enough to demand that people step down from just about anything. His life is going to be forever altered for the simple fact that he was accused, even if there ends up being no basis for it. Even if it turns out that it was just the manufactured story of a ruthless reporter and a pissed off chick.

    It has been mentioned that he has been dragging wikileaks into this personal situation, for example using the wikileaks twitter feed to promote the idea that he is innocent and the US is running a smear campaign. I do not think he would be asked to step down, especially so publicly, if he had kept his personal life and wikileaks separate.

    Yes, HE has mixed wikileaks with this rape charge. Not the newspaper that published the story in the less-than-24h time period during which the charges stood. The guy who hadn't even been told there were charges against him before the article was published. It's all his fault. He was clearly asking for it... the way he dresses...

    --

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  15. Re:Price by Mr.+Freeman · · Score: 5, Insightful

    "He's most likely guilty of something."

    Based on what, the fact that the media said he MIGHT be? Why are you so quick to deny this guy a trial? Do you have evidence that we don't?

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  16. Re:Price by PopeRatzo · · Score: 5, Insightful

    He's most likely guilty of something.

    This is an amazing statement. It sounds a lot like something you'd hear some crooked cop say when stopping a black driver in a nice car.

    "He's most likely guilty of something".

    Considering the enormous motivation of people in power to make sure Assange is put out of business, I'm surprised that this clown show with the rape charges today, no raped charges tomorrow, new rape charges the day after that is being done in such an amateurish manner.

    Whatever happens to Assange, I'm sure that the people who will take over operations of wikileaks soon are getting the message loud and clear: Do not mess with those of us in power, or there will be a committed campaign coming at you from all sides, from the police, to press releases, to your personal life.

    Yes, the message of how fragile a person's life is comes through loud and clear when you make life uncomfortable for the powerful.

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  17. Re:Price by Anonymous Coward · · Score: 5, Insightful

    Too true.

    IIRC, it was Rumsfeld that initially bluntly put the phrase "paradigm of prevention" out there into the open- of course, this deceptive model of targeting whoever they wanted was nothing new- but it was time to introduce a new platitude into public that few people would notice, and even fewer would care.

    The 'shift' that the paradigm of prevention brings to our countries practices in dealing with such potential risks is this philosophy-
    'Not having proof that we are going to be attacked is not sufficient reason for not taking action against the potential assailants.'

    It is, in a very real way, guilty before proven innocent.

    In the past year or two I have felt a glimmer of hope, though... 7-10 years ago when I talked about this sort of stuff in public, people freaked out and thought I was either insane, mentally handicapped, emotionally distraught, or trolling irl... but in the last 2 years I have seen somewhat of an awakening amongst all classes of people- from teachers to law enforcement to businessmen to blue collar workers to local government, people are starting to wake up and realize that this problem will not be solved by appealing to the political self proclaimed clerisy. The question is, will it turn into a full fledged witch (terrorist) hunt between citizens or will the citizens realize their enemy is more than a person, or a group of people, or a country, or even a political/religious ideology.

    When it comes to national security, nothing is sacred, unfortunately.

    If that is your take on it, the 'terrorists' have already beat you. If nothing is sacred, then, not only has national security has failed, but so has the dream that filled our founding fathers with such zeal. Death is nothing new. People have been dying for a long time now. What is important is that people die for something that they believe in, something that betters mankind, something that leaves a legacy to be commended and honored by posterity. If our "national security" is just making sure that we put bullets in people trying to get across our land without protecting us from the dangers already in our government then our problem is far greater than can be solved, which is what I am suggesting.

    Don't be so quick to resort to action. Never write anyone, or any party, a blank check of support for spouting off a few obvious statements that anyone can agree on without digging deep into the details of the "solution". Case in point:

    “Law and order” ... is a phrase that has appeal for most citizens, who, unless they themselves have a powerful grievance against authority, are afraid of disorder. In the 1960s, a student at Harvard Law School addressed parents and alumni with these words:
    The streets of our country are in turmoil. The universities are filled with students rebelling and rioting. Communists are seeking to destroy our country. Russia is threatening us with her might. And the republic is in danger. Yes! danger from within and without. We need law and order! Without law and order our nation cannot survive.
    There was prolonged applause. When the applause died down, the student quietly told his listeners: “These words were spoken in 1932 by Adolf Hitler.”

  18. Re:Price by Znork · · Score: 5, Interesting

    From what's leaked it sounds like it's basically a case of someone sleeping with more than one woman, being sloppy with protection, women getting pissed off and anxious about STD's and involving the Swedish judiciary which gets the brilliant (and internally divisive) idea to use it as a pilot case on whether consent can be considered having not been given, if it was predicated upon the use of effective protection. Which is why you get one attorney saying 'rape!', the next one saying 'idiot, it's barely even minor assault in the worst case, if even intentional', and the third going 'hmmm... interesting theory, lets victimize someone (and maybe save the first attorney) to test it'.

    Ah, well, if consent can be predicated upon such issues I suspect we'll get a whole load of 'rape' charges against women who said they were on the pill...

  19. Re:Price by Krahar · · Score: 5, Insightful

    That Hitler quote is interesting, and it makes me wonder why general education does not generally involve reading the speeches of evil people who were never the less skilled at persuasion. I would want such a thing as a way to immunize the citizens against demagogues, but then I realized that another outcome could be that we'd have a lot more nazi's in the world today. Though perhaps even that price would be worth it as long as the average citizen got a bit wiser to political manipulation.