AUSTRALIA’S journalists’ union called on Prime Minister Scott Morrison and the British government to oppose the extradition of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to the United States today.
Yesterday Mr Assange, an Australian citizen, was dragged out of the Ecuadorean embassy in London after the President Lenin Moreno’s government revoked the Australian journalist’s asylum-seeker status.
He had spent the past seven years in the building on the grounds that if he was detained in Britain he would be extradited to the US and jailed as a spy in retaliation for Wikileaks’ exposure of Iraq War logs and infamous Collatoral Murder footage of a brutal 2007 helicopter air strike.
As advertising drains away, newsrooms shrink and local papers disappear, MIKE WAYNE argues that the market model for news is broken – and that public-interest alternatives, rooted in democratic accountability, are more necessary than ever
On January 2 2014, PJ Harvey used her turn as guest editor of the Today programme to expose the realities of war, arms dealing and media complicity. The fury that followed showed how rare – and how threatening – such honesty is within Britain’s most Establishment broadcaster, says IAN SINCLAIR
Speaking to the Morning Star’s Ceren Sagir, general secretary of the National Union of Journalists LAURA DAVISON outlines the threats to journalism from Palestine to Britain, and the unique challenges confronting the industry through the rise of AI


