Assange wants PNG asylum deal reversed

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange says his political party will call on the government to reveal full details of its asylum seeker arrangement with PNG.

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He is the world's most famous asylum seeker and now Julian Assange's political party wants a reversal of Australia's PNG asylum seeker deal.

The WikiLeaks founder and Senate candidate outlined his vision for a more transparent Australia during the launch of his political party in Melbourne on Thursday.

Mr Assange addressed the launch via Skype from London, where he is holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy, avoiding extradition to Sweden to face allegations of sexual assault.

Mr Assange said his party's seven Senate candidates, including himself, will address the gradual decline in Australian democracy during the past 30 years.

"Canberra needs to be a place of light, not a place of darkness," he said.

The party wants transparency on the PNG asylum seeker deal, more media diversity and a review of climate change targets, free of industry influence.

Mr Assange said his party candidates were an expert "union of people who give a damn" and would be fearless in their scrutiny of government.

"We now have a situation where essentially the two major parties represent either in the case of the coalition big business, not small business," he said.

"In the case of the ALP, where the inner core of the ALP represents property developers, union leaders, Macquarie bank, as in the case of Bob Carr.

(In 2005 the Macquarie Bank announced Mr Carr - who quit NSW politics after 10 years as premier - would advise the bank in a part-time role.)

"Not small business, not the Australian people."

WA candidate Gerry Georgatos said both major parties displayed a "race to the bottom" on the asylum seeker debate, with the government handballing its responsibilities to PNG, one of the most impoverished countries in the region.

The party would seek transparency on the deal and call for its reversal, he said.

Mr Georgatos said the major parties had misled Australians about the scale of the problem facing the nation, and our asylum seeker intake was "minuscule" on a global scale.

Mr Assange, who is standing for the Senate in Victoria, said if elected, there were processes to replace him with another party candidates if he was unable to fulfil his role.


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2 min read
Published 25 July 2013 4:12pm
Updated 26 August 2013 10:48am
Source: AAP


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