Julian Assange Extradition to US Approved by UK Government

WikiLeaks indicated that it will be pursuing an appeal of the decision.

We may earn a commission from links on this page.
Julian Assange has 14 days to file an appeal against his extradition, which was approved today.
Julian Assange has 14 days to file an appeal against his extradition, which was approved today.
Image: Jack Taylor (Getty Images)

Julian Assange—founder of the whistleblowing website WikiLeaks—can now be extradited from the United Kingdom to the United States, where he will face charges of espionage.

In April, a London court filed a formal extradition order for Assange, and the UK Home Secretary approved the order today, meaning that Assange can be extradited back to the United States. According to CNBC , Assange is facing 18 charges of espionage for his involvement with WikiLeaks, the website that published hundreds of thousands of classified military documents in 2010 and 2011. 

Advertisement

Assange has been in prison or the Ecuadorian Embassy in London for much of the last decade. He’s currently being held in a high-security prison in London. Assange has the right to appeal today’s decision within 14 days, and WikiLeaks indicated it would be doing just that in a statement posted on Twitter this morning.

Advertisement

“This is a dark day for press freedom and for British democracy,” WikiLeaks said. “Julian did nothing wrong. He has committed no crime and is not a criminal. He is a journalist and a publisher, and he is being punished for doing his job.”

Advertisement

Julian Assange founded WikiLeaks in 2006 as a whistleblowing website that publishes classified media from anonymous sources. The website rose to prominence in 2010 when Chelsea Manning, an army intelligence analyst, leaked hundreds of thousands of battlefield reports to WikiLeaks from her time serving in the Middle East in the late 2000's. These reports included the now infamous “Collateral Murder” video pulled from a military helicopter assault in Baghdad, which killed civilians, according to a 2010 article by NBC News.

The extradition approval is a part of a years-long attempt by the U.S. government to nab Assange on charges of espionage, which has ignited a global conversation on the ethics of WikiLeaks and Assange alike.

Advertisement