La justicia sueca ordena el arresto por violación del fundador de Wikileaks
Julian Assange ha negado las acusaciones y ha insinuado que se podía tratar de un complot de Estados Unidos por las filtraciones sobre Irak y Afganistán en su web
EL PAÍS / AGENCIAS - Madrid / Estocolmo - 18/11/2010
http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/justicia/sueca/ordena/arresto/violacion/fundador/Wikileaks/elpepuint/20101118elpepuint_9/Tes
Swedish Justice ordered the arrest for violation of the founder of WikileaksJulian Assange has denied the allegations and hinted that it could deal with a U.S. plot leaks on Iraq and Afghanistan on its website
COUNTRY / AGENCY - Madrid / Stockholm - 18/11/2010
Swedish justice has ordered imprisonment for an alleged crime of violation of Julian Assange, founder of the controversial Wikileaks website, which has published noise leaks about Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
The court, meeting in Stockholm has studied their case at the request of the Prosecutor's Office in Sweden. Declared the imprisonment of Assange, the court must issue an international search and arrest of the founder of Wikileaks.
The Prosecutor's Office ordered last September to reopen the preliminary investigation against Assenge for an alleged crime of rape a week after the chief prosecutor shut. The Swedish chief prosecutor, Marianne Ny, considered that there were "reasons" to support a suspicion of a crime and it must be classified as rape.
The founder of Wikileaks was charged with rape in August, just days after arriving in Sweden to give several lectures. Assange, questioned in relation to complaints filed by two women, denied the allegations and hinted that it could deal with a U.S. plot to discredit him after his controversial leaks internet portal with thousands of confidential documents.
The most recent were the 400,000 documents leaked last October on the war in Iraq, denouncing the death of over 100,000 Iraqis since 2003. According to the analysis of these documents, U.S. officials left without investigating hundreds of reports that exposed abuses, torture, rape and even murder perpetrated systematically by the police and the Iraqi army, allied with international forces invaded the country. British and U.S. officials insisted until now that there was no official registry of victims, but the documents set out in 66,081 non-combatants killed a total of 109,000 casualties during the six years studied. More than 15,000 civilians were killed in incidents so far unknown. Most victims are civilians, as deduced from the information handled by the United States, due to militia attacks and ethnic account settings and politicians that Iraqi security forces and international were unable to avoid.
Earlier in the month of April, organization buzzed 90,000 Washington by publishing documents on the U.S. action in the war in Afghanistan. The documents illustrate in great detail the accumulation of errors in Afghanistan for six years (January 2004 to December 2009) on which information is provided: repeated civilian deaths in military action, covert action continued to hunt insurgents successive failures of unmanned aircraft and, worst of all, permanent crossings collaborative information-even, according to some interpretations, between the Pakistani secret services and the Taliban leadership.
http://www.elpais.com/articulo/internacional/justicia/sueca/ordena/arresto/violacion/fundador/Wikileaks/elpepuint/20101118elpepuint_9/Tes
Swedish Justice ordered the arrest for violation of the founder of WikileaksJulian Assange has denied the allegations and hinted that it could deal with a U.S. plot leaks on Iraq and Afghanistan on its website
COUNTRY / AGENCY - Madrid / Stockholm - 18/11/2010
Swedish justice has ordered imprisonment for an alleged crime of violation of Julian Assange, founder of the controversial Wikileaks website, which has published noise leaks about Iraq and Afghanistan wars.
The court, meeting in Stockholm has studied their case at the request of the Prosecutor's Office in Sweden. Declared the imprisonment of Assange, the court must issue an international search and arrest of the founder of Wikileaks.
The Prosecutor's Office ordered last September to reopen the preliminary investigation against Assenge for an alleged crime of rape a week after the chief prosecutor shut. The Swedish chief prosecutor, Marianne Ny, considered that there were "reasons" to support a suspicion of a crime and it must be classified as rape.
The founder of Wikileaks was charged with rape in August, just days after arriving in Sweden to give several lectures. Assange, questioned in relation to complaints filed by two women, denied the allegations and hinted that it could deal with a U.S. plot to discredit him after his controversial leaks internet portal with thousands of confidential documents.
The most recent were the 400,000 documents leaked last October on the war in Iraq, denouncing the death of over 100,000 Iraqis since 2003. According to the analysis of these documents, U.S. officials left without investigating hundreds of reports that exposed abuses, torture, rape and even murder perpetrated systematically by the police and the Iraqi army, allied with international forces invaded the country. British and U.S. officials insisted until now that there was no official registry of victims, but the documents set out in 66,081 non-combatants killed a total of 109,000 casualties during the six years studied. More than 15,000 civilians were killed in incidents so far unknown. Most victims are civilians, as deduced from the information handled by the United States, due to militia attacks and ethnic account settings and politicians that Iraqi security forces and international were unable to avoid.
Earlier in the month of April, organization buzzed 90,000 Washington by publishing documents on the U.S. action in the war in Afghanistan. The documents illustrate in great detail the accumulation of errors in Afghanistan for six years (January 2004 to December 2009) on which information is provided: repeated civilian deaths in military action, covert action continued to hunt insurgents successive failures of unmanned aircraft and, worst of all, permanent crossings collaborative information-even, according to some interpretations, between the Pakistani secret services and the Taliban leadership.
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