Swedish prosecutors have again refused to question Assange in this country (or the Ecuadorean embassy) - they are going to justify thmselves on WATO now.
Owen Jones on Julian Assange
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amateur51
Originally posted by ahinton View PostAnd try to Torquemada writing like this, yes?...
**BAD TASTE ALERT**
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Originally posted by jean View PostSwedish prosecutors have again refused to question Assange in this country (or the Ecuadorean embassy) - they are going to justify thmselves on WATO now.
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Originally posted by jean View PostDid anyone hear?
The Karl Rove connection suggested by some earlier link seems to be of some interest here as the interview re sexual activity (from published material both women stating that much of which was consensual) is easily summarised as rape charges which gives the impression that Assange forcibly assualted two women thus tarring him as an violent criminal - such muddying of the waters pretrail would appear to have been a typical ploy by that person.
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Lateralthinking1
Whoa! President Correa has used my David and Goliath analogy. Wonder what he thinks of Breakfast on 3?
UK government websites are attacked as computer hackers collective Anonymous retaliates for the way the Julian Assange case has been handled.
Fortunately I have no recollection whatsoever of where I was in early 2006 and of what I never saw.
I don't even know these days what is happening in the area of work and pensions but I am sure they are being managed with the sort of efficiency and decency one has come to expect in the longer term.
Hey, 5,000 volts. I'm on Fire! - http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=TrSReUAB8rQ
(But that's not Tina Charles)Last edited by Guest; 21-08-12, 17:36. Reason: Take it easy - don't let the sound of your own wheels make you crazy!
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Originally posted by Frances_iom View Postthe interview re sexual activity (from published material both women stating that much of which was consensual) is easily summarised as rape charges which gives the impression that Assange forcibly assualted two women thus tarring him as an violent criminal
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Originally posted by Pabmusic View PostPlease don't be concerned, but do be curious. People don't usually have to think about these things (thank goodness!), but I did work in the UK criminal justice system from 1976 until I retired in 2009. I'm no expert on Sweden, and some things I say about their system are assumptions, but the Common Law -v- Civil Law split could be read as 'Anglo-Saxon' -v- The Other Europeans. There are real differences (jury trials, for instance, originated with the Anglo-Saxons, and are now mainly found in the UK, USA, Canada, Australia, New Zealand and the like). In Europe, it's mainly Civil Law, often dating from the Code Napoleon. But this is terribly simplistic.
It has meant a real difference historically. Torture was a legitimate practice under Civil Law, because a person usually couldn't be convicted without either two witnesses or a confession. Torture was never sanctioned under the Common Law (though that didn't stop its unlawful use by powerful monarchs, of course). There's a letter from Pope Clement V to Edward II, saying (in modern English) "We hear you forbid torture as being contrary to the laws of your land; but no state can override Canon Law, Our Law; therefore I command you at once to submit these men to torture...You have already imperilled your soul as a favourer of heretics...Withdraw your prohibition and we grant you remission of sins". That's the pope ordering an English king to disobey English law on pain of damnation!
In the UK we have several levels. Magistrates courts, mostly for minor(ish) offences, though these could still include offences where a custodial sentence might be given, and other courts where jurors drawn from the regular populace are involved. Possibly in some countries such as Sweden they have more professional legal experts.
In the UK in some courts we have judges, juries, a prosecuting team and a defence team. The teams are adversarial, and present evidence and argue the case to the jury. The jury decides on guilt or otherwise for each charge. The judge's role is to conduct proceedings, and to pass appropriate sentences in the case of guilty verdicts. Judges are supposed, in that kind of court, AFAIK, to be impartial. I don't know what happens in Sweden.Last edited by Dave2002; 21-08-12, 14:06.
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I don't normally have any time at all for either the Daily Mail or Melanie Phillips, but this article contains an accusation against Assange which, if true, is serious. (I have read various versions of the accusation before, but have been unable to find another source for them, so maybe she made them up):
"...Assange...is thought to have caused a number of very brave individuals to have their security compromised and maybe even to lose their lives...Some of the classified cables he published, for example, identified the names, villages, relatives’ identities and precise locations of Afghans who had co-operated with Nato troops..."
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Originally posted by vinteuil View Post... I think Judges are supposed to be impartial, whether in the English, Scottish, Roman-Dutch, or other systems - even including the Code Napoléon !
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scottycelt
Originally posted by ahinton View PostFrankly, I neither know nor care ... And what has "stultifying feminist dogma" to do with accusations of sexual assault, particularly when the making of such accusations is equally opn to males and females?
Mr Galloway MP conceded that some people would not wish to hear what he had to say on such matters (rape and sexual assault) but then he is quoted as saying .. 'but it has to be said'. I'm with Mr Galloway on that, as it happens.
Mr Galloway has expressed views on what constitutes 'rape' which are diametrically opposed to current feminist dogma. That is precisely why his comments have appeared to cause such fury and controversy in some very predictable quarters.
However, I repeat ... all this is well nigh irrelevant ... it's Swedish law that matters in this case, NOTHING else whether feminist dogma or the opposing and rather more traditional views of Mr Galloway!
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Originally posted by scottycelt View PostMr Galloway MP conceded that some people would not wish to hear what he had to say on such matters (rape and sexual assault) but then he is quoted as saying .. 'but it has to be said'. I'm with Mr Galloway on that, as it happens.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostMr Galloway has expressed views on what constitutes 'rape' which are diametrically opposed to current feminist dogma. That is precisely why his comments have appeared to cause such fury and controversy in some very predictable quarters.
Originally posted by scottycelt View PostHowever, I repeat ... all this is well nigh irrelevant ... it's Swedish law that matters in this case, NOTHING else whether feminist dogma or the opposing and rather more traditional views of Mr Galloway!
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Originally posted by amateur51 View PostMr Mel Brooks will be invoicing you for that joke shortly, ahinton
**BAD TASTE ALERT**
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=CqgZnvfJ9Jg
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