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About 35 arrested at rally for Wikileaks suspect

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Hundreds of people rallied Sunday outside the base where Army Pfc. Bradley Manning is being detained on charges of providing classified data to Wikileaks.

Wikileaks1.jpgTighe Barry, center, wearing pink, confronts a group of Virginia State Police officers approaching protesters who rallied outside the main gate of Marine Corps Base Quantico , Va., on Sunday afternoon, March 20, 2011. Hundreds protested the treatment of an imprisoned Army private Bradley Manning, who is suspected of providing classified data to WikiLeaks.

By BEN NUCKOLS, Associated Press

TRIANGLE, Va. (AP) — Wearing T-shirts and carrying signs bearing the smiling image of Army Pfc. Bradley Manning, hundreds of people rallied Sunday outside the base where he's being detained on charges of providing classified data to Wikileaks.

About 35 people were arrested by police in riot gear after they refused to vacate an intersection in front of the entrance to Marine Corps Base Quantico. The rally was held along with more than two dozen others around the world to protest Manning's detention in Quantico's brig.

Manning is held alone in his cell for all but an hour a day. At night, his clothes are taken and he is given a suicide-proof smock to wear to bed. Manning's lawyer has repeatedly complained that Manning's strict confinement conditions are punitive, a charge the military has denied.

The military maintains that Manning's treatment complies with U.S. law and military regulations, and it has said that some of the conditions are needed to prevent him from harming himself. He faces nearly two dozen charges, including aiding the enemy, a crime that can bring the death penalty or life in prison. Army prosecutors, however, have told Manning's lawyers that they will not recommend the death penalty.

Wikileaks2.jpgDaniel Ellsberg, left, the former military analyst who in 1971 leaked the Pentagon Papers, is processed for arrest by a Virginia State troopers following his arrest after a Sunday afternoon, March 20, 2011, rally near the main gate of Marine Corps Base Quantico, Va. Hundreds attended to protest the treatment of an imprisoned Army private Bradley Manning, suspected of providing classified data to WikiLeaks. About 30 people were arrested Sunday.

David House, a friend who has visited Manning about 15 times since September, told the protesters that Manning appreciated their support.

"It's stuff like this that gives Bradley hope," House said. "When I go in there, look him in the eyes and say, 'Bradley, there are people on the outside that support you,' his eyes light up."

Daniel Ellsberg, a Manning supporter who leaked the so-called Pentagon Papers in 1971, was one of the protesters arrested Sunday. Officers handcuffed some protesters and led them away after they refused to leave U.S. Route 1 in front of the base.

Short scuffles ensued as dozens of officers attempted to push the protesters, some of whom were seated on the pavement, away from the intersection. Many sat beneath a yellow banner that read, "Caution: Whistleblower Torture Zone."

Prince William County police said in a statement late Sunday that about 35 people were taken into custody and charged with unlawful assembly and careless interference with traffic. One protester was also charged with assault and battery of an officer.

The heavy police presence at the rally included officers from six agencies, mounted officers and tactical vehicles.

Wikileaks3.jpgVirginia State Troopers arrest a protester following Sunday afternoon's, March 20, 2011, rally near Quantico, Va., where hundreds attended to protest the treatment of an imprisoned Army private Bradley Manning, suspected of providing classified data to WikiLeaks.

Several leaders of the rally wanted to lay flowers at an Iwo Jima memorial at the base's entrance but were kept about 40 feet away by police who had set up barriers. Col. Thomas V. Johnson, a spokesman for the Marine Corps Combat Development Command at Quantico, said access to the memorial was denied because protest activity is not permitted on base grounds.

"We're pleased that people were able to express their First Amendment rights in a manner that did not infringe upon base property," Johnson said.

Manning, a former intelligence analyst and self-styled "hactivist," is accused of leaking a raft of Iraq and Afghanistan war logs, more than 250,000 confidential State Department cables and a military video of an attack on unarmed men in Iraq.

Earlier this month, Manning's confinement was the topic of widespread media coverage when chief State Department spokesman P.J. Crowley resigned after criticizing the handling of Manning's detention. Crowley's resignation prompted reporters to ask President Barack Obama about Manning's confinement, and he said he had been assured the conditions were appropriate.


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