As US prosecutors lodge an appeal in their resolve to jail Julian Assange for espionage, a former British Cabinet minister has delivered a stinging attack on Britain’s extradition treaty with the US.
Archive
Britain whitewashes Uganda’s stolen election
by PHIL MILLER | 20 January 2021
TAGGED: Uganda
The UK government has effectively endorsed evidently unfair elections in Uganda, where both the opposition and media were subjected to violence and intimidation, to help Yoweri Museveni, a favoured authoritarian leader who has been in power for 34 years, to remain in office.
As repression in Egypt increases, so does UK cooperation with its regime
by BELÉN FERNÁNDEZ | 19 January 2021
TAGGED: Egypt
Ten years on from the Arab Spring, the UK government’s relationship with a brutal regime in Egypt goes from strength to strength, as the country witnesses its worst human rights crisis in modern history, under Abdel Fattah al-Sisi.
John Major praised Gulf ruler’s power grab, newly declassified files show
by PHIL MILLER | 15 January 2021
TAGGED: BP, Oman
Former British prime minister John Major praised Oman’s dictator, Sultan Qaboos, for passing a law that gave him absolute power, describing it as ‘clearly a most imaginative and constructive step forward’. The law enacted in 1996 by the close British ally effectively banned political parties, independent media and criticism of the ruler.
Judge’s ruling in Julian Assange case could threaten investigative journalism in UK and around the world
by RICHARD NORTON-TAYLOR | 8 January 2021
TAGGED: Assange
There is a real danger that the British judge’s ruling in the Julian Assange extradition case will encourage other governments to charge and seek to extradite journalists in the UK and elsewhere for exposing their military operations and human rights abuses.
Revealed: UK sets up media influencing project in Venezuela amid secretive £750,000 ‘democracy promotion’ programme
by MATT KENNARD | 6 January 2021
TAGGED: Venezuela
The UK government has established a journalism project to ‘influence’ Venezuela’s ‘media agenda’ while a Foreign Office-funded foundation is spending £750,000 on a secretive ‘democracy-promotion’ programme in the country, as Britain appears to deepen efforts to remove the Maduro government.
‘A lot of people share my opinion within the military’, says soldier who protested against UK arms exports to Saudi Arabia
by PHIL MILLER | 18 December 2020
TAGGED: Saudi Arabia, Yemen
Ahmed Al-Batati, a Lance Corporal in the British army, staged a public protest against British arms sales to Saudi Arabia in August, concerned that “a child was dying every 10 minutes” in Yemen. In his first interview since becoming a civilian, he tells Declassified that others in the army share his view and that he took action because parliament did nothing.
Detectives ‘not interested’ in probing army commanders about Northern Ireland murders, says veteran
by PHIL MILLER | 18 December 2020
TAGGED: Ireland, Police, terrorism
A multimillion-pound police probe into murders allegedly committed by a British army agent inside the IRA in Northern Ireland is reluctant to question senior UK commanders in charge of the covert mission, a retired intelligence officer has told Declassified.
Did the UK’s secret Libya policy contribute to the Manchester terror attack?
by PETER OBORNE | 16 December 2020
TAGGED: Libya, Manchester Bombing, MI6, terrorism
The official inquiry into the 2017 Manchester bombing has yet to probe the links between the terrorist, Salman Abedi, and UK covert action during the 2011 war in Libya – yet there is no point in the inquiry unless it asks difficult questions the British establishment would rather avoid.
The Ministry of Defence blacklisted Declassified – but won’t admit it
by MARK CURTIS | 11 December 2020
A UK government review into how the Ministry of Defence (MOD) handled relations with the organisation I edit, Declassified UK, concludes the MOD ‘did not have a policy’ of blacklisting us, despite providing evidence that it did. It reveals a deep problem in UK governance – that Britain is more oligarchy than democracy.