Thursday, January 17, 2019

Guardian all alone as MSM fail to corroborate Assange/Manafort ‘dud’ story







BREAKING FROM WIKILEAKS:  : On Jan 7 DoJ issued letters rogatory to interrogate six former diplomats & staff at Ecuador's London embassy following Guardian's fabricated story of Assange-Manafort meetings. Ecuador scheduled all to be interrogated tomorrow in Quito


The Guardian’s ‘bombshell’ story that ex-Donald Trump adviser, Paul Manafort, met with Wikileaks Julian Assange is falling apart, as outlets fail to corroborate the claims, some even questioning the paper’s standards.

On November 27, the Guardian splashed with an eye-catching article, claiming that its journalists had seen an Ecuadorian intelligence agency document detailing that Manafort and Assange had met three times in the London Ecuadorian embassy, including during the run-up to the 2016 US Presidential Election.

The piece suggested that "Russians" were also guests at the embassy, though it failed to identify any individuals in question. The article also didn’t include any non-anonymous sources nor did it reproduce, in any capacity, the document in question.

The story didn’t quite have the impact desired, instigating an ongoing debate even among the most ardent members of so-called ‘Resistance.’

It wasn’t only the article’s contents that were called into question. The piece, penned by Luke Harding, the paper’s one time Russia correspondent, and Dan Collyns, was written in collaboration with Fernando Villavicencio a self-styled Ecuadorian journalist/activist. While Villavicencio’s name appeared on the byline in the Guardian’s print version, it wasn’t included in the more widely read online iteration.

The discrepancy could be due to claims, referenced by journalists Ben Norton, among others that the Villavicencio has faced ‘repeated accusations of fabrications.’

While criticism from Wikileaks, who have a long-standing feud with the Guardian is unsurprising, the publication is now facing attack from fellow liberal outlet the Washington Post, among others.

Veteran Post reporter Paul Fahri raised issues with the Guardian, writing that the story could well be "a dud," adding that "No other news organization has been able to corroborate the Guardian’s reporting to substantiate its central claim of a meeting."


The criticism comes as an ex-Ecuadorian diplomat Fidel Narváez slammed the story, telling the Canary: "I find it incredible that the Guardian allows these people [Luke Harding and Dan Collyns] to repeatedly damage the paper’s credibility and reputation."

The Guardian has made an attempt to dilute the story, changing the original article by inserting qualifiers. For example, "the meeting" between Assange and Manafort, became "the apparent meeting," while the headline was changed adding in "sources say" from the more definitive original: "Manafort held secret talks with Assange."

 

The publication’s spokesperson, quoted in the post, stated: "This story relied on a number of sources. We put these allegations to both Paul Manafort and Julian Assange’s representatives prior to publication. Neither responded to deny the visits taking place. We have since updated the story to reflect their denials."

The Guardian had reported that their article "could shed new light" on the leaked Hillary Clinton emails, Russian hackers and the rise of Trump, in fact, the publication has only illuminated accusations of its own inadequacies and falling standards.




SOURCE
 
 
https://www.rt.com/uk/445664-assange-manafort-guardian-russia/

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