1. Julian Assange to leave Ecuadorian embassy ‘soon’
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange has told a press conference he will “soon” leave Ecuador’s embassy in London, where he has been living for two years to avoid extradition.
Assange also addressed rumours over his poor health, saying anyone would be affected by spending two years in a building with no outside areas or direct sunlight.
“I can confirm that I am leaving the embassy soon, but perhaps not for the reasons that the Murdoch press and Sky News are saying at the moment,” he said.
Sky News and the British press have been reporting he has heart and lung problems.
Assange has been detained in the UK after Sweden issued an international arrest warrant over allegations of sexual assault. They want to question him over claims that he raped one woman and sexually molested and coerced another.
Assange says both encounters were consensual.
Fairfax Media have exclusively reported that Assange plans to leave under changes to the UK law.
They write:
Mr Assange clarified his remarks by referring to what he described as “a range of important legal developments in the United Kingdom,” especially the British government’s decision to opt out of the European Arrest Warrant system under which Sweden sought his extradition to be questioned about sexual assault and rape allegations first raised in August 2010.
“It has been our legal advice from the very beginning that under international law and European law everyone has a right to asylum and that right must be respected legally,” Mr Assange said
2. Asylum seeker children to be given bridging visas
The Daily Telegraph reports that 1547 child detainees and their families who have been held in community detention housing will be allowed to settle in the community on bridging visas while their refugee applications are being processed.
The reports states that the policy will not apply to those transferred from offshore for medical treatment, or to the 300 children on Nauru and Christmas Island.