How whistleblowing went mainstream
A few years back it would have been a no-brainer for Edward Snowden that WikiLeaks was the right forum for his expose – but it’s no longer the destination for whistleblowers.
137 items found
From the ‘fiscal cliff’ from which America never fell, to an Iraq inquiry that is still to report back. Here are seven things that were expected to happen in 2013 – but did not.
A few years back it would have been a no-brainer for Edward Snowden that WikiLeaks was the right forum for his expose – but it’s no longer the destination for whistleblowers.
The US Army soldier sentenced to 35 years for giving classified documents to Wikileaks says he wants to live the rest of his life as a woman.
US army solider Bradley Manning could face 136 years in prison for leaking military documents to whistleblower organisation WikiLeaks – as his sentencing hearing starts.
Bradley Manning, accused of leaking documents to whistleblower organisation WikiLeaks, is found not guilty of “aiding the enemy” but is convicted of five espionage and five theft counts.
The head of the British company accused of bugging the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, tells Channel 4 News the allegation is “utterly ridiculous”.
A diplomatic row is brewing after Bolivian President Evo Morales’s jet is grounded in Vienna to be searched, presumably for Edward Snowden. But Bolivia says officials were refused entry to the plane.
The father of the fugitive whistleblower Edward Snowden tells NBC television that his son may return to face trial in the US under certain conditions.
Ecuadorean Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino says that former US National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden has asked Ecuador for asylum.
The US soldier accused of leaking thousands of secret documents to Wikileaks has for the first time admited the leak at a military hearing and pleaded guilty to some of the lesser charges he faces.
The latest figures from the Home Office are that, between January 2004 and October 2012, Britain extradited 92 people from the UK to the US and only 43 were extradited from America to Britain.
The Nobel Peace Prize is the most prestigious award of its kind, but after criticism over the committee’s politicisation and questions raised over recent winners, is the prize losing its credibility?
Weeks after she criticised George Galloway’s comments on consensual rape, Respect leader Salma Yaqoob resigns citing a “breakdown in trust” at the top of the party.
As Anonymous go to Wikileaks with a new trove of secret emails, could this be the new tactic for the rag-tag army of hacktivists? And why are Stratfor interested in Assange? Channel 4 News explores.
Whistleblower website, WikiLeaks, says it has released a cache of more than five million emails from US global security company, Stratfor.