Australian leaders cautiously welcome expected plea that could bring Assange home
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese said on Tuesday there was nothing to be gained by keeping the Australian incarcerated.
AP
Melbourne (Australia), 25 June
Australian leaders cautiously
welcomed an expected plea agreement that could set free Julian Assange, who was
pursued for years over WikiLeaks' publication of a trove of classified
documents.
Prime Minister Anthony Albanese
said on Tuesday there was nothing to be gained by keeping the Australian
incarcerated.
A plane thought to be carrying
Assange landed Tuesday in Bangkok as he heads to the Northern Mariana Islands,
a US commonwealth in the Pacific midway between Australia and Japan, where he
is expected to appear in a US federal court Wednesday local time. He is
expected to plead guilty to an Espionage Act charge of conspiring to unlawfully
obtain and disseminate classified national defense information, the US Justice
Department said in a letter filed in court.
Assange is expected to return to
Australia if a judge accepts the plea agreement. Public support for Assange has
grown in Australia during the seven years he has spent avoiding extradition to
the United States by hiding in the Ecuadorean Embassy in London and later
during his five years in Belmarsh Prison.
Albanese has been lobbying since
his government was elected in 2022 for the United States to end its prosecution
of Assange, and his plight was seen as a test of the prime minister's leverage
with President Joe Biden. Albanese had been a senior minister in a center-left
Labor Party government that in 2010 staunchly backed US criticisms of
WikiLeaks' classified information dumps. But Assange has breached no Australian
law.
Albanese told Parliament that
Australian High Commissioner to the UK Stephen Smith had flown with Assange
from London. “The government is certainly aware that Australian citizen Mr
Julian Assange has legal proceedings scheduled in the United States. While this
is a welcome development, we recognize that these proceedings are crucial and
they're delicate,” Albanese told Parliament.
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