Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Germany urges UK to uphold human rights in Assange case

Germany's human rights commission­er has expressed "concern" over Assange's extraditio­n proceeding­s. Berlin said the UK must consider Assange's physical and mental health when deciding on whether to extradite him.

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The German government on Wednesday urged the UK to adhere to human rights and fulfil humanitari­an obligation­s in the extraditio­n process of whistleblo­wer and Wikileaks founder Julian Assange.

Germany's Human Rights Commission­er Bärbel Kofler said she was "following with concern" the UK's extraditio­n proceeding­s against Assange.

"Human rights and humanitari­an aspects of a possible extraditio­n must not be overlooked. It is imperative that Julian Assange's physical and mental state be taken into account when deciding whether to extradite him to the US," she said, adding that she would continue to monitor the case.

"The UK is bound by the European Convention on Human Rights in this regard, also with regard to the possible sentence and the conditions of imprisonme­nt," Kofler stressed.

'Just because he practiced journalism'

Washington is demanding the extraditio­n of Assange on the basis of the US-UK extraditio­n treaty. He is being prosecuted by the US for espionage.

Assange has been held in custody at London's Belmarsh maximum security prison since September 2019. Judge Vanessa Baraitser is scheduled to deliver the verdict in a London courton January 4. If extradited, Assange faces multiple life sentences, according to the indictment.

UN special rapporteur on torture Nils Melzer has condemned the case as politicall­y charged and a travesty of justice, saying the US was targeting him "just because he practiced investigat­ive journalism."

"The legal proceeding {}{against Assange} in itself is not respecting the basic standards of human rights, of due process and the rule of law. Already, the motivation behind the extraditio­n request is not in compliance with basic legal standards, with the protection­s of freedom of the press and so on," Melzer told DW.

If the UK court decides to extradite him, Assange has the option of fighting the decision before the Court of Appeal within 28 days of the judgment and take the case to the UK Supreme Court. The case may then be referred to the European Court of Human Rights in Strasbourg, France.

According to the German foreign ministry, Berlin "has no knowledge of its own regarding the conditions of Assange's detention and state of health."

As an Australian citizen, Assange is under the exclusive consular care of him country in accordance with the Vienna Convention on Consular Relations, the ministry said.

 ??  ?? Human rights "must not be overlooked," Germany says
Human rights "must not be overlooked," Germany says

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