The Wikileaks organization is under siege, with founder Julian Assange held in a UK jail and the site facing increasing difficulty in raising funds.
Assange was remanded in custody on Swedish sexual assault charges yesterday after being
denied bail due to fears he would flee the country before a deportation hearing next week, the
BBC reported.
His lawyers say the Swedish charges, which involve alleged assaults on two women in August, are politically motivated, however his arrest didn’t prevent Wikileaks from releasing the latest batch of diplomatic cables last night.
The fresh issue takes the tally of leaked US State Department cables to 900 out of a total of around 251,000, and site spokesman Kristinn Hrafnsson vowed it would continue, regardless of whether Assange was at the helm or not.
However Kevin Poulsen, a high-profile former US hacker who now writes for
Wired, claimed the
site was in disarray due to the organization’s “secrecy and compartmentalization.”
Meanwhile, Visa Europe has become the latest US corporation to cut off service, temporarily suspending support for online donations to the group while it probes whether the site breaches its compliance rules, a spokesman told Telecoms Europe.net.
Rival MasterCard is planning to follow suit, the
BBC reported.
Payment site PayPal
cut ties with Wikileaks on December 4, and various sources state the firm’s Swiss bank account has been frozen.
Wikileaks began setting up
mirror sites around the world to post the State Department cables after its US domain provider EveryDNS
shut it down on December 3.
Robert Clark & Michael Carroll