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| Global Research, August 16, 2012 | ||||||
| I  returned to the UK today to be astonished by private confirmation from  within the FCO that the UK government has indeed decided – after immense  pressure from the Obama administration – to enter the Ecuadorean  Embassy and seize Julian Assange. This will be, beyond any  argument, a blatant breach of the Vienna Convention of 1961, to which  the UK is one of the original parties and which encodes the centuries –  arguably millennia – of practice which have enabled diplomatic relations  to function. The Vienna Convention is the most subscribed single  international treaty in the world. The provisions of the Vienna Convention  on the status of diplomatic premises are expressed in deliberately  absolute terms. There is no modification or qualification elsewhere in  the treaty.  Article 22 1.The premises of the mission shall be inviolable. The agents of the receiving State may not enter them, except with the consent of the head of the mission. 2.The receiving State is under a special duty to take all appropriate steps to protect the premises of the mission against any intrusion or damage and to prevent any disturbance of the peace of the mission or impairment of its dignity. 
 Not even the Chinese government tried to enter the US Embassy to arrest the Chinese dissident Chen Guangchen. Even during the decades of the Cold War, defectors or dissidents were never seized from each other’s embassies. Murder in Samarkand  relates in detail my attempts in the British Embassy to help Uzbek  dissidents. This terrible breach of international law will result in  British Embassies being subject to raids and harassment worldwide.  The government’s calculation is  that, unlike Ecuador, Britain is a strong enough power to deter such  intrusions. This is yet another symptom of the “might is right”  principle in international relations, in the era of the neo-conservative  abandonment of the idea of the rule of international law. The British Government bases its  argument on domestic British legislation. But the domestic legislation  of a country cannot counter its obligations in international law, unless  it chooses to withdraw from them. If the government does not wish to  follow the obligations imposed on it by the Vienna Convention, it has  the right to resile from it – which would leave British diplomats with  no protection worldwide.  I hope to have more information  soon on the threats used by the US administration. William Hague had  been supporting the move against the concerted advice of his own  officials; Ken Clarke has been opposing the move against the advice of  his. I gather the decision to act has been taken in Number 10.  There appears to have been no  input of any kind from the Liberal Democrats. That opens a wider  question – there appears to be no “liberal” impact now in any question  of coalition policy. It is amazing how government salaries and  privileges and ministerial limousines are worth far more than any belief  to these people. I cannot now conceive how I was a member of that party  for over thirty years, deluded into a genuine belief that they had  principles. Craig Murray  is an author, broadcaster and human rights activist. He was British  Ambassador to Uzbekistan from August 2002 to October 2004 and Rector of  the University of Dundee from 2007 to 2010. | ||||||
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