Chaos spreads among Govts and Markets:
Arrest warrant for WikiLeaks Chief
US: Interpol Wednesday issued a global arrest warrant for the shadowy
founder of WikiLeaks, as the chaos from its massive dump of secret US
cables spread from governments to financial markets.
The United States suspended the military’s access to some sensitive
US diplomatic correspondence in a bid to stop new leaks, as the leaders
of France and Pakistan were the latest to be stung by cables obtained by
the website.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, a 39-year-old Australian computer
hacker, is wanted in Sweden for questioning over the alleged rape and
molestation of two women. Assange has denied the charges.
Interpol, which is based in Lyon, France, said early Wednesday local
time that it had alerted all member states to arrest Assange if he is
spotted. He spends much of his time in Britain and Sweden.
Assange is said to lead a spy-like life of rarely sleeping in the
same place twice. Ecuador’s left-leaning government initially offered
Assange residency, but President Rafael Correa backtracked Tuesday.
In one of a series of defiant media interviews, Assange boasted that
he was ready with a fresh “megaleak” that could take down a major bank,
leading Bank of America shares to tumble more than three percent Tuesday
on speculation.
Assange told Forbes magazine that the bank leak would “give a true
and representative insight into how banks behave at the executive level
in a way that will stimulate investigations and reforms, I presume.”
In another interview conducted from an undisclosed location over a
Skype Internet phone, Assange told Time magazine that Secretary of State
Hillary Clinton should resign over a cable that appeared to show the
United States ordered diplomats to spy on foreign officials,
particularly at the United Nations.
State Department spokesman Philip Crowley said that Clinton did not
draft the document and that her name was affixed systematically to many
cables out of Washington.
Crowley said the State Department had temporarily suspended the
Pentagon’s access to some of its correspondence, halting a trend to
greater information sharing within the US Government launched after the
September 11, 2001 attacks.
“Steps are being made ... to correct weaknesses in the system that
have become evident because of this leak,” said State Department
spokesman Philip Crowley, who characterized Assange as an “anarchist.”
WikiLeaks and US authorities have not fully explained how the 250,000
sensitive cables managed to go public.
But suspicion has fallen on Bradley Manning, a disgruntled
23-year-old ex-Army intelligence analyst.
The Pentagon has faced questions on how it entrusted so much
sensitive data to the low-ranking soldier, who was arrested in May after
WikiLeaks released a video showing a 2007 US Apache helicopter strike in
Baghdad that killed civilian reporters.
Washington, Wednesday, AFP
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