Mexico president says he urged Donald Trump to pardon Julian Assange, repeats asylum offer

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador says he urged Donald Trump to pardon Julian Assange before the US leader left office last year.

Donald Trump Welcomes Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador To The White House

President Andrés Manuel López Obrador of Mexico and US President Donald Trump at the White House on 8 July, 2020. Source: Getty

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador says he had sought a pardon for Julian Assange from former United States president Donald Trump before he left office last year and has repeated his offer of asylum for the WikiLeaks founder.

Last month, the Australian-born Assange moved closer to facing criminal charges in the United States for one of the biggest leaks of classified information after the country won an appeal over his extradition in an English court.

US authorities accuse Assange of 18 counts relating to WikiLeaks' release of confidential US military records and diplomatic cables which they said had put lives in danger.

Mr Lopez Obrador reiterated the asylum offer he had made for Assange a year ago and said that before Mr Trump was replaced as US president by Joe Biden last January, he had written him a letter recommending that Assange be pardoned.
Mexico did not receive a reply to the letter, Mr Lopez Obrador told a regular government news conference on Monday.

"It would be a sign of solidarity, of fraternity to allow him asylum in the country that Assange decides to live in, including Mexico," Mr Lopez Obrador said.

If granted asylum in Mexico, Assange would not be able to interfere in the affairs of other countries and would not represent any sort of threat, Mr Lopez Obrador added.
More hurdles remain before Assange could be sent to the US after an odyssey which has taken him from being a teenage hacker in Melbourne to years holed up in the Ecuador's embassy in London and then incarcerated in a maximum-security prison.

Supporters of the 50-year-old Assange cast him as an anti-establishment hero who has been persecuted for exposing US wrongdoing and double-dealing across the world from Afghanistan and Iraq to Washington DC.


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2 min read
Published 4 January 2022 7:07am
Source: AAP, SBS


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