Officials in Mexico are ready to provide political asylum to Wikileaks’ co-founder Julian Assange after a British court ruled the Australian publisher won’t be extradited to the United States.
Assange currently remains in the United Kingdom and was indicted by U.S. prosecutors on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse related to the 2010 WikiLeaks’ publication of leaked military and diplomatic documents in Afghanistan and Iraq.
During his hearing on Monday, British District Judge Vanessa Baraitser rejected the U.S. extradition request out of concerns Assange might commit suicide.
The United States responded Monday they are planning to appeal Baraitser’s decision to reject their request.
During Monday’s conference, López Obrador said he thinks Assange “deserves a chance,” adding that he is “in favor of pardoning him” and the country is ready to “give him protection.”
The Mexican president also urged last year that Britain should release Assange, calling his detention “torture” and saying WikiLeaks documents had exposed the world’s “authoritarian” workings.
The 49-year-old publisher has spent most of the last decade either in prison or self-imposed confinement, following his release of thousands of secret classified files and diplomatic cables that caused embarrassment to many governments around the world.
Lopez Obrador, who took office in December 2018, has long railed against ruling elites and rhetorically has sought to break with establishment politics and economics.
Morales stepped down from his post on Nov. 10 in an undisclosed location amid mass protests and a loss of support from the police and military. He was being criticized for manipulating Bolivia’s laws and its 2009 Constitution so that he could run for president a fourth time.
Mexico’s Foreign Secretary Marcelo Ebrard granted Morales’ asylum request at a press conference on Nov. 11.