View allAll Photos Tagged Wikileaks

Wikileaks is the website dedicated to leaking military private documents for the world to view.

 

Photo fromhttp://static.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2010/1/29/1264759737356/Wikileaks-001.jpg; Fair Use Doctrine.

Shots from Day 11. For additional information check out Adbusters - www.adbusters.org/campaigns/occupywallstreet

 

Here's the series of images for Day 10.

Dec 3rd. Washington DC. Bradley Manning's attorney gave an exclusive presentation discussing the trial and the unlawful pretrial punishment of Bradley Manning. #freebrad

 

www.bradleymanning.org

After a speech and introduction by respected Australian journalist and film maker John Pilger, English rock musician Roger Waters, of Pink Floyd fame, performs outside the UK Home Office accompanied by Andy Fairweather Low at a rally against deportation of imprisoned Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange, who is currently detained at the high security Belmarsh prison following conviction for breach of bail.

 

Assange's supporters fear he will be deported to the U.S. and face life in prison for publishing information which includes incriminating evidence the U.S. and UK engaged in possible war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

All rights reserved © 2019 Ron F

 

Follow me on Twitter for the most recent shots.

#wikileaks #vault7 #cia, printing out at 101.at

Dec 3rd. Washington DC. Bradley Manning's attorney gave an exclusive presentation discussing the trial and the unlawful pretrial punishment of Bradley Manning. #freebrad

 

www.bradleymanning.org

Les pays, dont la France, partent à la chasse au Wikileaks !

Associate Professor Jake Lynch, Director of the Centre for Peace and Conflict Studies at the University of Sydney, Secretary General of the International Peace Research Association, sydney.edu.au/arts/peace_conflict/people/jake_lynch.shtml

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and TCU’s Schieffer School of Journalism host the a session of the CSIS-Schieffer Series Dialogues On Wikileaks: Impact on Public Policy and Journalism. This event was moderated by Bob Schieffer, Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News; and Anchor, CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” The panelists were Dr. John Hamre, President and CEO, CSIS; Karen DeYoung, Associate Editor, The Washington Post; and Scott Shane, National Security Correspondent, The New York Times. Find more including full audio and video at csis.org/event/wikileaks-impact-public-policy-and-journalism

Julian Assange will be questioning the Swedish authorities on Thursday, December 17, 2015 (Photo: ITV)

LONDON – The founder of WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, will be questioning the Swedish authorities at the Embassy of Ecuador in London, England, on suspicion of rape and sexual harassment did...

 

milutenali.com/2015/12/14/wikileaks-founder-will-interrog...

And if nobody in the government accesses Wikileaks, it will just disappear...

 

Read the whole post at:

 

ivcaffeine.com/2010/12/06/wikileaking-all-over-secrecy-sh...

#757Live WikiLeaks said in its statement Sunday that Snowden requested the group "use its legal expertise and experience to secure his safety."

Dec 3rd. Washington DC. Bradley Manning's attorney gave an exclusive presentation discussing the trial and the unlawful pretrial punishment of Bradley Manning. #freebrad

 

www.bradleymanning.org

After a speech and introduction by respected Australian journalist and film maker John Pilger, English rock musician Roger Waters, of Pink Floyd fame, performs outside the UK Home Office accompanied by Andy Fairweather Low at a rally against deportation of imprisoned Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange, who is currently detained at the high security Belmarsh prison following conviction for breach of bail.

 

Assange's supporters fear he will be deported to the U.S. and face life in prison for publishing information which includes incriminating evidence the U.S. and UK engaged in possible war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

All rights reserved © 2019 Ron F

 

Follow me on Twitter for the most recent shots.

WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange's bail hearing, 14.12.2010

 

I know this is definitely old news as Assange is now out on bail and is holed up in the countryside on mansion-arrest with an electronic tag, but I still wanted to post my own personal record of the day, as a large, international Press scrum and a group of enthusiastic WikiLeaks supporters gathered outside Westminster Magistrates' Court whilst Assange's fate was decided inside.

 

As we know, he was granted bail, but was sent back to prison because the Crown Prosecution Service objected and lodged their intention to appeal this decision. Bizarrely, they seem to have told a bit of a huge fib to Mark Stephens - Assange's lawyer - by telling him that the Swedish Prosecutor was the party objecting to bail, when it turns out it was the CPP all along!

 

Two days later their objection was tossed out by a judge at the Crown Court.

 

In the meanwhile, the American Government continues to behave stereotypically, and is now trying to twist and contort US law to find a plausible excuse for demanding that the bootlicking British Government hand Assange over to them so they can show him first hand how right he was to expose their lies, corruption and iniquities to the public view.

They say he's rammed two Swedish lambs

They think he can be stopped

He's locked away in farmer's shed

His bale of hay's been cropped

 

Baa, he says, we'll carry on

Your crooks won't lift my sack

The world must know what shepherds do

At night when ewes push back

   

Free Wikileaks demonstration, Barcelona :: 2010

After a speech and introduction by respected Australian journalist and film maker John Pilger, English rock musician Roger Waters, of Pink Floyd fame, performs outside the UK Home Office accompanied by Andy Fairweather Low at a rally against deportation of imprisoned Wikileaks publisher Julian Assange, who is currently detained at the high security Belmarsh prison following conviction for breach of bail.

 

Assange's supporters fear he will be deported to the U.S. and face life in prison for publishing information which includes incriminating evidence the U.S. and UK engaged in possible war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq.

 

All rights reserved © 2019 Ron F

 

Follow me on Twitter for the most recent shots.

WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange's bail hearing, 14.12.2010

 

I know this is definitely old news as Assange is now out on bail and is holed up in the countryside on mansion-arrest with an electronic tag, but I still wanted to post my own personal record of the day, as a large, international Press scrum and a group of enthusiastic WikiLeaks supporters gathered outside Westminster Magistrates' Court whilst Assange's fate was decided inside.

 

As we know, he was granted bail, but was sent back to prison because the Crown Prosecution Service objected and lodged their intention to appeal this decision. Bizarrely, they seem to have told a bit of a huge fib to Mark Stephens - Assange's lawyer - by telling him that the Swedish Prosecutor was the party objecting to bail, when it turns out it was the CPP all along!

 

Two days later their objection was tossed out by a judge at the Crown Court.

 

In the meanwhile, the American Government continues to behave stereotypically, and is now trying to twist and contort US law to find a plausible excuse for demanding that the bootlicking British Government hand Assange over to them so they can show him first hand how right he was to expose their lies, corruption and iniquities to the public view.

Shots from Day 11. For additional information check out Adbusters - www.adbusters.org/campaigns/occupywallstreet

 

Here's the series of images for Day 10.

Dec 3rd. Washington DC. Bradley Manning's attorney gave an exclusive presentation discussing the trial and the unlawful pretrial punishment of Bradley Manning. #freebrad

 

www.bradleymanning.org

WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange's bail hearing, 14.12.2010

 

I know this is definitely old news as Assange is now out on bail and is holed up in the countryside on mansion-arrest with an electronic tag, but I still wanted to post my own personal record of the day, as a large, international Press scrum and a group of enthusiastic WikiLeaks supporters gathered outside Westminster Magistrates' Court whilst Assange's fate was decided inside.

 

As we know, he was granted bail, but was sent back to prison because the Crown Prosecution Service objected and lodged their intention to appeal this decision. Bizarrely, they seem to have told a bit of a huge fib to Mark Stephens - Assange's lawyer - by telling him that the Swedish Prosecutor was the party objecting to bail, when it turns out it was the CPP all along!

 

Two days later their objection was tossed out by a judge at the Crown Court.

 

In the meanwhile, the American Government continues to behave stereotypically, and is now trying to twist and contort US law to find a plausible excuse for demanding that the bootlicking British Government hand Assange over to them so they can show him first hand how right he was to expose their lies, corruption and iniquities to the public view.

WikiLeaks' founder Julian Assange's bail hearing, 14.12.2010

 

I know this is definitely old news as Assange is now out on bail and is holed up in the countryside on mansion-arrest with an electronic tag, but I still wanted to post my own personal record of the day, as a large, international Press scrum and a group of enthusiastic WikiLeaks supporters gathered outside Westminster Magistrates' Court whilst Assange's fate was decided inside.

 

As we know, he was granted bail, but was sent back to prison because the Crown Prosecution Service objected and lodged their intention to appeal this decision. Bizarrely, they seem to have told a bit of a huge fib to Mark Stephens - Assange's lawyer - by telling him that the Swedish Prosecutor was the party objecting to bail, when it turns out it was the CPP all along!

 

Two days later their objection was tossed out by a judge at the Crown Court.

 

In the meanwhile, the American Government continues to behave stereotypically, and is now trying to twist and contort US law to find a plausible excuse for demanding that the bootlicking British Government hand Assange over to them so they can show him first hand how right he was to expose their lies, corruption and iniquities to the public view.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and TCU’s Schieffer School of Journalism host the a session of the CSIS-Schieffer Series Dialogues On Wikileaks: Impact on Public Policy and Journalism. This event was moderated by Bob Schieffer, Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News; and Anchor, CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” The panelists were Dr. John Hamre, President and CEO, CSIS; Karen DeYoung, Associate Editor, The Washington Post; and Scott Shane, National Security Correspondent, The New York Times. Find more including full audio and video at csis.org/event/wikileaks-impact-public-policy-and-journalism

London 11th December 2010 - As part of a worldwide campaign of support for Wikileaks and its imprisoned editor-in-chief Julian Assange, a group of demonstrators gather at London's famous Speakers' Corner.

Snorre Serigstad Valen the 26 year old Norwegian pianist, singer and politician nominated the whistle-blower and anti-secrecy website Wikileaks for the 2011 Nobel peace prize, an award conferred by a committee of five people chosen by the Norwegian Parliament. This unique nomination of an internet website that utilizes social media tools such as Twitter, Facebook and YouTube to disseminate state secrets acknowledges the bringing about of immense change to the political landscape, as tyrannical regimes that have traditionally held power over conventional media sources are now unable to control the freedom of the internet. The Norwegian Nobel Committee accepts nominations from many sources including University professors and presidents, former committee members and advisors, former recipients of the award, and in Valen’s case members of national assemblies and governments. Inspired by Wojciech Moskwa ow.ly/3Psf6 image source Wikipedia ow.ly/3Psdg

Davide Dormino - sculptor

John Goetz - ARD-Hauptstadtstudio

Sarah Harrison - WikiLeaks

Stefania Maurizi - journalist and author

 

Ten years ago, when WikiLeaks was created by Julian Assange, very few people could imagine the revolution unleashed by the publication of documents never seen before, like the Afghan War Logs, or the most recent files on the NSA surveillance of foreign leaders. How far WikiLeaks is willing to go to protect sources has been demonstrated by the Snowden case, when WikiLeaks sent its journalist Sarah Harrison to Hong Kong to assist Snowden to get asylum. As Edward Snowden said: «All of these news organisations around the world, all of these publishers were trying to get a piece of the story. There was only one publisher that actually said: We want to help the source, we want to make sure he’s ok, we want to make sure that, no matter what happens, he has somebody on his side, and that was WikiLeaks.» Can one protect high value sources in an age of mass surveillance? What can journalists and sources learn from the WikiLeaks experience? What can they learn from the cases of Chelsea Manning, Jeremy Hammond, Edward Snowden? What can happen when a journalist does not protect their source? And why are these lessons important for all of us, not only for journalists and publishers?

  

www.youtube.com/watch?v=_MpkOW3FDJU

There was a big gap but they crashed the parade - not official manning group

在 WHITNEY MUSEUM见到一个戴面具的Anonymous,真他妈酷毙了,对了,我还见到wikileaks的类似卫星直播车的车子了,真他妈酷。

Hi, I'd much appreciate it if you could drop me a mail/comment AND a link back to the photos Flickr page if you use this (or any of my) photo/s in any capacity. Thanks!

 

For commercial usage, kindly contact me directly via this Flickr account or @biatch0r via twitter.

Shots from Day 11. For additional information check out Adbusters - www.adbusters.org/campaigns/occupywallstreet

 

Here's the series of images for Day 10.

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and TCU’s Schieffer School of Journalism host the a session of the CSIS-Schieffer Series Dialogues On Wikileaks: Impact on Public Policy and Journalism. This event was moderated by Bob Schieffer, Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News; and Anchor, CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” The panelists were Dr. John Hamre, President and CEO, CSIS; Karen DeYoung, Associate Editor, The Washington Post; and Scott Shane, National Security Correspondent, The New York Times. Find more including full audio and video at csis.org/event/wikileaks-impact-public-policy-and-journalism

The Center for Strategic and International Studies (CSIS) and TCU’s Schieffer School of Journalism host the a session of the CSIS-Schieffer Series Dialogues On Wikileaks: Impact on Public Policy and Journalism. This event was moderated by Bob Schieffer, Chief Washington Correspondent, CBS News; and Anchor, CBS News’ “Face the Nation.” The panelists were Dr. John Hamre, President and CEO, CSIS; Karen DeYoung, Associate Editor, The Washington Post; and Scott Shane, National Security Correspondent, The New York Times. Find more including full audio and video at csis.org/event/wikileaks-impact-public-policy-and-journalism

Investigative Medien stehen zunehmend unter

Druck. In Großbritannien sitzt der Journalist und

Gründer der Enthüllungsplattform Wikileaks Julian

Assange nach acht Jahren Botschaftsasyl seit

April 2019 im Hochsicherheitsgefängnis Belmarsh

in Isolationshaft. Die USA fordern seine Auslieferung und machen ihm den Prozess wegen der

Veröffentlichung von US-Kriegsverbrechen im Irak

und in Afghanistan. Julian Assange drohen bis zu

175 Jahre Haft, womöglich sogar die Todesstrafe.

Der US-Whistleblower Edward Snowden bezeichnet den Fall als »Kriegserklärung gegen den

Journalismus«.

In Frankreich verfolgt die Regierung die Journalisten Geoffrey Livolsi und Mathias Destal vom Investigativportal Disclose und Benoît Colombat von

Radio France, weil sie den Einsatz französischer

Waffen im Krieg gegen die Zivilbevölkerung Jemens aufgedeckt haben. Das Vorgehen erinnert

an die Türkei, wo Journalisten verfolgt werden, die

über Kriegsverbrechen berichteten.

Wie können diese Angriffe auf den investigativen

Journalismus abgewehrt werden? Wie wichtig ist

hierbei die internationale Solidarität mit verfolgten

Journalisten wie Julian Assange und Whistleblowern wie Chelsea Manning und Edward Snowden?

Und wie kann eine Auslieferung von Julian Assange an die US-Justiz verhindert werden?

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