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Assange: Leveson Inquiry will “crack down” on investigative journalism

By Katie Stanton
May 25th 2012

 

 

Wikileaks founder Julian Assange tells Katie Stanton the Leveson Inquiry is a threat to investigative journalism

At a question and answer session last night, said to be his last public appearance before finding out whether he will be extradited to Sweden next week, Julian Assange became quite passionate about the failings of the UK press.

“The UK press’s biggest problem is the reporting of lies… [but] the Leveson Inquiry will crack down on investigative journalism, further preventing the publication of truth.

“The problem is, any journalist with influence gets sucked in by politicians and becomes a political actor. Leveson needs to drop the idea that it’s all about News International.

“Local media is clubbing together to beat the hell out of News International but it’s not just Murdoch, it’s everyone.

Assange was speaking following the first UK screening of Shadows of Liberty, a documentary he features in about “today’s disintegrating freedoms within the US media” due to connections between big corporations and news outlets.

Assange showed up to the Q&A wearing a Guy Fawkes mask, symbolically worn by members of the Anonymous movement, to show “solidarity” with supporters of WikiLeaks and the Anonymous movement.

 


See also:
 

• MPs attack Murdochs in damning report into phone-hacking 1 May 2012

• Guess which front page fails to lead on Leveson? 25 Apr 2012

• Wikileaks saga comes to town as Assange tastes fresh air 17 Dec 2010


 

The Leveson Inquiry, which has been on-going since November 2011, is currently hearing from a range of celebrities, politicians, sportsmen and public figures in connection with the phone hacking scandal uncovered in 2011. The cost of the inquiry has now reached more than £2 million with monthly costs of around £350,000.

At the Q&A, Assange went on to attack the coalition’s plans to store every email, webpage visit and phone call made in the UK:

The phone hacking scandal is an insignificant matter compared to what is being proposed by the Queen and David Cameron to intercept online communication. We have all become victims of constant phone hacking scandals by the government.”

Assange will find out on Wednesday whether the Supreme Court has decided to block his extradition to Sweden, where he is wanted for questioning on sex crime allegations.

WikiLeaks, the online portal that controversially published classified documents supplied by whistleblowers and anonymous sources and was once receiving up to £120,000 in donations per day, has suffered financial difficulty within the last year due to a number of payment processors, like PayPal, refusing to be used as a method of donation for the website.

 Originally published by Left Foot Forward
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