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Sabtu, 22 Juni 2013

WikiLeaks' Assange urges support for Snowden, slams Obama 'betrayal'

WikiLeaks' Assange urges support for Snowden, slams Obama 'betrayal'

London (CNN) -- WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange urged the world

Saturday to "stand with" Edward Snowden, the man who admitted leaking

top-secret details about U.S. surveillance programs, according to the

text of a speech posted on Twitter.

As he appealed for a "brave country" to step forward and offer Snowden

asylum, Assange also accused U.S. President Barack Obama of betraying

a generation of "young, technically minded people."

Assange was scheduled to speak from the balcony of the Ecuadorian

Embassy in London on Saturday, but the appearance was postponed at

short notice "due to a security situation," WikiLeaks said on Twitter.

Wednesday marked a year since Assange sought refuge in the embassy to

avoid extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning over

allegations that he raped one woman and sexually molested another.

Assange has repeatedly said the allegations in Sweden are politically

motivated and tied to the work of his website. Ecuador's government

granted him asylum in August, but British authorities have said they

will arrest him if he leaves the premises.

As a result of his decision to seek refuge in the embassy, "I have

been able to work in relative safety from a U.S. espionage

investigation," said Assange, according to the text of the speech.

"But today, Edward Snowden's ordeal is just beginning."

Assange's words came hours after Snowden was charged by U.S. federal

prosecutors with espionage and theft of government property, according

to a criminal complaint unsealed in U.S. District Court in Virginia on

Friday.

Snowden, 30, has admitted in interviews that he was the source behind

the leak of classified documents about the NSA's surveillance

programs. Those leaks were the basis of reports this month in

Britain's Guardian newspaper and The Washington Post.

He is believed to be in hiding in Hong Kong. The United States has

asked authorities there to detain the former National Security Agency

contract analyst on a provisional arrest warrant, The Washington Post

reported, citing unnamed U.S. officials.

Assange, in his published speech, said the espionage charge had come

"like clockwork," making Snowden the eighth "leaker" to be charged

with that count by the Obama administration.

"Two dangerous runaway processes have taken root in the last decade,

with fatal consequences for democracy," he said.

"Government secrecy has been expanding on a terrific scale.

Simultaneously, human privacy has been secretly eradicated ... The

U.S. government is spying on each and every one of us, but it is

Edward Snowden who is charged with espionage for tipping us off."

Also among the eight "leakers" is WikiLeaks source Bradley Manning,

Assange said. Manning is being court-martialed on charges he aided

U.S. enemies by leaking documents he obtained as an Army intelligence

analyst.

He named the others as Barrett Brown, Jeremy Hammond, Aaron Swartz,

Gottfrid Svartholm and Jacob Appelbaum.

Assange suggested Obama was the real "traitor" for his failure to live

up to his promises of hope, change and transparency in government. And

he warned that the U.S. government will lose the battle if it tries to

take on the tech-savvy people now calling its actions into question.

"Edward Snowden is one of us. Bradley Manning is one of us. They are

young, technically minded people from the generation that Barack Obama

betrayed. They are the generation that grew up on the Internet, and

were shaped by it," he said.

"The U.S. government is always going to need intelligence analysts and

systems administrators, and they are going to have to hire them from

this generation and the ones that follow it.

"One day, they will run the CIA and the FBI. This isn't a phenomenon

that is going away."

Assange added that charging Snowden "is intended to intimidate any

country that might be considering standing up for his rights" and

appealed for efforts to find asylum for him to be intensified.

For More Info Visit : http://edition.cnn.com/

CNN's Susannah Palk contributed to this report.

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