Wikileaks
Open Letter in Defence of WikiLeaks’ Right to Publish
365 Days of #WikiLeaks (Since the ‘Collateral Murder’ Video Release) #365Leaks
Nigerian Elections: Candidates, as Previously Revealed in WikiLeaks Cables, Still Register to Vote Multiple Times
Nigerian elections that had been postponed until Monday, April 4th, have been postponed yet again by the Independent National Electoral Commission (INEC), which is headed by Professor Attahiru Jega. From the INEC headquarters, the rescheduling was announced by Jega, who said since announcing the rescheduling several requests made to the Commission have urged it to consult more widely and ensure the two-day postponement addresses all logistical issues
WikiLeaks Cable Vindicates Struggle Against Dow Chemical in India
Bulgaria – Mafia Lives Here
Yemeni Commander That Defected Was Once Targeted by Saleh
Saudi pilots tasked with striking Houthis in northern Yemen aborted the mission after realizing the site they were being asked to hit was the headquarters of General Ali Mohsen Al-Ahmar, a Yemeni northern area commander and known political opponent of Saleh. That s what a cable released by WikiLeaks sent out from the US Embassy in Riyadh on February 7, 2010 reads.
NYU Law School Panel on the ‘Anxiety’ Caused in the World by WikiLeaks
US-Libya Business Association Leaders on ‘Surviving the WikiLeaks Controversy’ Let’s Just Forget About the Ukrainian Nurse
Wikileaks cables reveal that one of the chief objectives of diplomats in Libya over the past years have been to improve and ensure that the energy sector is able to have maximum commercial opportunities. This led the USLBA, the National Foreign Trade Council, the National Association of Manufacturers and the US Chamber of Commerce to urge Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to "pursue waiver authority for Section 1083 for countries that have been removed from the list of state sponsors of terrorism" on February 28, 2008.
Bradley Manning placed on suicide watch
Wikileaks barrister Geoffrey Robertson receives NY Bar Association award, warns US
While accepting an award for distinction in international law and affairs from the NY Bar Association, Geoffrey Robertson, who will defend Wikileaks founder Julian Assange at his extradition hearings in London in February, warned that the United States "risked irrevocable damage to its reputation if it pursued Assange" by "aiming the blunderbuss of its 1917 Espionage Act, death penalty and all, at a publisher who is a citizen of a friendly nation," according to the The Age: US told to drop Assange pursuit.
2010-12-17 Australian Federal Police Assange Has Committed No Crime Under Australian Law
As the Australian Federal Police inquiry announced its finding that neither Julian Assange nor Wikileaks have broken any Australian laws, the Australian Labor Party finds its public support slipping. According to an article in The Age, the opposition has overtaken the government for the first time since the federal election in August. Support for the coalition is up four per cent since the start of December, and support for the government is down four per cent. According to The Age
Rallies Around the World in Support of Julian Assange
As reported by the BBC, The Sydney Morning Herald and The Guardian rallies in support of Wikileaks and Julian Assange were held world wide. As a snapshot of the magnitude of rallies and Wikileaks' increasingly popular transparency movement the following is a list of "known" rallies held in the past 48 hours.
Noam Chomsky, Julian Assange and Michael Moore Brothers in Arms
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