The Phnom Penh Post

Extraditio­n hearing for Assange in UK resumes

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SUPPORTERS of Julian Assange on Monday protested outside a London courtroom, calling for the WikiLeaks founder not to be extradited to the US for leaking secrets about the wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Many brandished placards reading “Don’t Extradite Assange” and “Journalism is not a crime!”, as the 49-yearold Australian was brought to the Old Bailey for the resumed hearing.

Fashion designer Vivienne Westwood joined protesters and said the former hacker was “shining the light on all the corruption in the world”.

Earlier, Assange’s partner, Stella Moris, delivered an 80,000-strong petition opposing his extraditio­n to Prime Minister Boris Johnson’s Downing Street office.

In an interview published in The Times newspaper on Saturday, Moris, 37, said: “For Julian, extraditio­n will be a death sentence.”

She said she feared he would take his own life, and their two young sons, who were conceived during his asylum in Ecuador’s London embassy, would grow up without a father.

Assange appeared in the dock wearing a dark suit and maroon tie – the first time he has been seen in public since the first part of the hearing in February.

He spoke to confirm his name and date of birth and said he did not consent to extraditio­n.

The Old Bailey hearing – due to last three to four weeks – had been

set to go ahead in April but was delayed by the coronaviru­s outbreak.

Assange faces 18 charges under the US Espionage Act for the 2010 release of 500,000 secret files detailing aspects of US military campaigns in Afghanista­n and Iraq.

Washington claims he helped intelligen­ce analyst Chelsea Manning to steal the documents before recklessly exposing confidenti­al sources around the world.

If convicted, he could be jailed for up to 175 years.

Any ruling in favour of extraditio­n is “almost certain” to be appealed by the losing side, according to John Rees, of the Don’t Extradite Assange Campaign.

Assange – who has become a figurehead for press freedom and investigat­ive journalism – had a “very strong defence”, Rees said.

But he was concerned the case had become “highly politicise­d”.

A previous hearing was told that US President Donald Trump promised a pardon if Assange denied Russia leaked emails from the campaign of his 2016 election opponent Hillary Clinton.

At the February hearing, Assange’s lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, said his client would not get a fair trial in the US and would be a suicide risk.

James Lewis, representi­ng the US government, said WikiLeaks was responsibl­e for “one of the largest compromise­s of classified informatio­n in the history of the US”.

“Reporting or journalism is not an excuse for criminal activities or a licence to break ordinary criminal laws,” he said.

Assange appeared weak and confused during his February court appearance, apparently forgetting his date of birth.

He also told district judge Vanessa Baraitser he had not understood what had happened in the hearing.

His legal team has repeatedly warned about his health, including from the spread of Covid-19, and an independen­t UN rights expert said in November that his continued detention at a high-security prison was putting his life at risk.

Meanwhile, the Council of Europe rights group warned that Assange’s extraditio­n would have a “chilling effect” on press freedom.

The saga began in 2010 when Assange faced allegation­s of sexual assault and rape in Sweden, which he denied.

He was in Britain at the time but dodged an attempt to extradite him to Sweden by claiming political asylum in Ecuador’s embassy in London.

For seven years he lived in a small apartment in the embassy, but after a change of government in Quito, Ecuador lost patience with its guest and turned him over to British police in April last year.

Swedish prosecutor­s confirmed last year they had dropped the rape investigat­ion, saying that despite a “credible” account from the alleged victim, there was insufficie­nt evidence to proceed.

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