Geneva:
WikiLeaks has lashed out at internet giant Google for handing over its
staffers’ emails and digital data to US authorities without swiftly
informing the whistleblowing site, terming it “an attack on journalism
and journalists, especially those working on security issues”.
Baltazar
Garzon, Director of WikiLeaks’ co-founder Julian Assange’s defence
team, yesterday said the dangerous implication is that “anything that
has to do with whistleblowing is being differentiated from journalism”.
On
December 24 last year, Google informed WikiLeaks that it handed over
the information under secret search warrants issued by a US federal
judge in March 2012, almost two and a half years after the incident.
The
warrants, citing an espionage, fraud and conspiracy investigation,
required the web giant to hand over the phone numbers, IP addresses,
credit card details, contents of all emails and other details for Google
accounts used by three of WikiLeaks staffers, Sarah Harrison, Kristinn
Hrafnsson and Joseph Faerrell.
The data collected contained all correspondence prior to March 22, 2012.
According
to the WikiLeaks lawyers, the warrant for email data says that the US
Justice department is investigating WikiLeaks for “conspiracy to commit
espionage”.
Garzon
added that it is difficult to believe that a case like this exists in
the 21st century and said the UN Special Rapporteur is mandated by Human
Rights Council resolution to protect against harassment directed at a
person’s freedom of opinion and expression including as a matter of high
priority such harassment against journalists.
Hrafsson said journalists cannot assume that any correspondence is safe and have to encrypt to ensure safety of their sources.
“If
you are working against the other side of the Atlantic there is a real
possibility of being branded a terrorist through the outdated Espionage
Act of 1917,” he said.
Hrafsson had around 35,000 emails in his Inbox including deleted ones from the time he was working as a journalist in Iceland.
The
legal team of Assange has shot off three letters – one to Google
Chairperson Eric Schmidt, second to Attorney General of the US Eric
Holder and third to the eastern court of Virginia.
In
a letter to Schmidt, Garzon has asked for “an inventory” of everything
that Google has provided to the US authorities. The legal team is also
currently exploring legal possibilities against Google and the US
government.
Garzon,
who is also known for issuing an international arrest warrant against
former Chilean President Augusto Pinochet, said as a jurist, he is
shocked by the behaviour of the US, the UK and Sweden.
Julian Assange has not been charged but has been treated worse than a detainee in a prison, he added.
Assange
faces rape and sexual assault allegations in Sweden. After losing his
appeal to the UK’s Supreme Court in June 2012 against extradition to
Sweden, he took refuge in the embassy of Ecuador in London which granted
him asylum. He has been living there since. Garzon says he fears
Assange will go the Bradley Manning way if he even steps out of the
embassy.
Sweden,
whose human rights records were reviewed in the universal periodic
review yesterday, did not respond to Ecuador, Argentina and Uruguay’s
recommendations to limit the time spent in pre-trial detention when
there has not yet been a charge and to protect defendants when they are
in a situation of asylum.
Sweden’s
Secretary of State for Foreign Affairs Annika Soder called the Assange
case a complex matter and unfortunate situation, saying the matter is
out of the government’s hands and is upto the legal authorities to
decide.
Posted by : Gizmeon
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