Julian Assange: Journalist, publisher, info warrior ... spy? | The Listening Post (Full)
Listen now
Description
On The Listening Post this week: The indictment of Julian Assange under the Espionage Act and the threat it poses to the media. Plus, the erasure of Palestinian history in Israel's archives. The US indictment against Julian Assange When WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was dragged out of the Ecuadorean embassy in London seven weeks ago, the site's editor, Kristinn Hrafnsson, told The Listening Post that the legal charges waiting for him in the United States were "just the tip of the iceberg". Last week, he was proven right. US prosecutors have expanded the indictment against Assange by another 17 counts, with the US Department of Justice now going after him using the 100-year-old Espionage Act. The law has been used against whistleblowers before, including WikiLeaks source Chelsea Manning, but never against a publisher. The precedent such a prosecution would set has been setting off alarm bells - including at mainstream media organisations - ever since. Contributors Caroline DeCell - staff lawyer, Knight First Amendment Institute Kevin Gosztola - managing editor, Shadowproof Trevor Timm - executive director, Freedom of the Press Foundation Gabe Rottman - project director, Reports Committee for Freedom of the Press On our radar Richard Gizbert speaks to producer Marcela Pizarro about the debate that turned the US-China trade war into a television spectacle - with an American news anchor in one corner and a Chinese presenter in the other. History suppressed: Censorship in Israel's archives Historical documents that would shed further light on Israel's treatment of Palestinians have, for years, sat under lock and key inside Israel's State and Military Archives. Under the pretexts of "security" or "privacy", more than 98 percent of those files are classified under a form of censorship that even the former chief archivist of Israel has criticised. For Palestinians, it is part of wider trends of cultural erasure and historical denial that have gone hand-in-hand with the decades-long theft not just of their land, but of their story. The Listening Post's Tariq Nafi reports on the silencing of Palestinian history in Israel's archives. Contributors Sherene Seikaly - associate professor, UC Santa Barbara Rona Sela - Israeli researcher on visual history and lecturer Mahmoud Yazbak - professor, University of Haifa More from The Listening Post on: YouTube - http://aje.io/listeningpostYT Facebook - http://facebook.com/AJListeningPost Twitter - http://twitter.com/AJListeningPost Website - http://aljazeera.com/listeningpost - Subscribe to our channel: http://aje.io/AJSubscribe - Follow us on Twitter: https://twitter.com/AJEnglish - Find us on Facebook: https://www.facebook.com/aljazeera - Check our website: https://www.aljazeera.com/
More Episodes
Will pressuring Sudan make a difference?: With more than 100 protesters killed in the past week, international pressure is growing on Sudan's military faction to compromise with its opponents. Ethiopia is leading mediation efforts to end the standoff. Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed is in Khartoum,...
Published 06/07/19
When you look at a country that's had 12 coups since 1932, along with another seven attempted ones, well, there's clearly something of a love-hate relationship with democracy. And so it is in Thailand, which had an election in March, the first since the 2014 coup, and now has a newly-confirmed...
Published 06/06/19
Quiet, picturesque New Zealand was the last place most people expected to see a massacre. "This is not us," the country grieved en masse after the Christchurch killings. But as the dust settles on a mass shooting that saw 51 Muslims shot and killed as they prayed, community leaders, survivors...
Published 06/06/19