Whistleblowing group WikiLeaks said
Tuesday it had no knowledge of and did not approve a delegation to Syria which
met President Bashar al-Assad and included members of Australia’s WikiLeaks
Party.
The delegation, aimed at showing
solidarity with the Syrian people and opposing Western military intervention,
reportedly included WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange’s father John Shipton, CEO
of the political party.
The group met with Assad on Dec.
23, according to a post on the Syrian president’s Twitter feed.
Zaman Alwasl was the first media outlet shed the light on the visit on Sunday.
The visit triggered a furor when
revealed in Australia on Tuesday, with the center-left Labor opposition
describing it as “extraordinary” and “irresponsible”.
“The Assad regime has been widely
criticized and correctly criticized around the world,” said Labor frontbencher
Chris Bowen.
“For an Australian political party
to think it’s sensible to go and have discussions and try and provide some
legitimacy, is something I think which they have to explain.”
The WikiLeaks Party was founded by
Assange as part of his failed campaign for election to Australia’s parliament
this year, but is distinct from the amorphous whistleblowing group.
WikiLeaks distanced itself from the
delegation when asked about it Tuesday.
“Peace brokering a good idea, but
obvious meeting would be spun without care. Did not know or approve,” it said
on its official Twitter feed.
According to The Australian
newspaper, the delegation included Shipton and WikiLeaks national council
member Gail Malone, as well as Sydney university academic Tim Anderson and
refugee activist Jamal Daoud.
Shipton announced plans to set up a
WikiLeaks Party office in Damascus in a show of solidarity with ordinary
Syrians, The Australian said.
The WikiLeaks Party said a “formal
report from the fact finding delegation will be published once the delegates
return to Australia”, in a brief statement on its Twitter feed.
In a December 22 website post
announcing it would take part in the “solidarity delegation”, the WikiLeaks
Party said the visit was to show opposition to violence and Western military
intervention.
“The WikiLeaks Party was the first
party in Australia to warn of the deadly consequences of any Western military
intervention in Syria,” the post said.
“It went further by questioning the credibility of the excuses of such intervention based on unsubstantiated reports of the Syrian Army’s use of chemical weapons against Syrian civilians.
“The same excuses,” which turned
out to be “no more than fabrications and lies” had been used to justify the
U.S.-led war in Iraq, the party said.
Disarmament teams returned
Scandinavian escort vessels to port Monday after it became apparent that an
end-of-year deadline for the removal of Syrian chemical weapons would not be
met.
The U.S.-Russia deal for Syria to
surrender more than 1,000 tons of chemical agents averted US-led military
strikes after a chemical weapons attack on August 21 near Damascus that the
United States says killed 1,400 people. (with AFP)
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