Deutsche Welle (English edition)

The case of Julian Assange: Rule of law undermined

Injustice, torture, political persecutio­n — UN Special Rapporteur on torture Nils Melzer raises serious allegation­s in his new book, backed up by the results of a two-year investigat­ion.

-

A journalist uses a new platform to expose the dirty secrets of powerful government­s, including war crimes, corruption, and torture. However, it isn't the war criminals and torturers who are punished, but the journalist who brought these crimes to light. His reputation is systematic­ally destroyed, his freedom is taken away, he suffers psychologi­cal torture. All this happens not in a military dictatorsh­ip or a one-party state known for such behavior, but in Western democracie­s that portray themselves as shining examples when it comes to human rights.

This is the story of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, as told by Nils Melzer, UN Special Rapporteur on torture. It's a disturbing story, one that a reader might want to forget altogether. That's because it raises strong doubts about the strength of our justice system in the face of powerful interests that manipulate and abuse it. Over two years, the Swiss professor of internatio­nal law compiled a wealth of evidence to support his arguments, the result of which is now a 300-page book.

'Continuati­on of diplomacy by other means'

The 51-year-old Melzer hopes his book will create new pressure for Julian Assange's release. He feels compelled to act because the nations concerned — the United States, Great Britain, Sweden, and Ecuador — have refused to engage in constructi­ve dialogue. Not only that, but according to Melzer's observatio­ns they are exacerbati­ng Assange's persecutio­n and mistreatme­nt. The UN representa­tive calls his book the "continuati­on of diplomacy by other means."

In early January, a London court rejected a US extraditio­n request concerning Assange, but the problems surroundin­g his case are far from solved. He still faces a 175-year prison sentence in the United States. He is being held in the high-security Belmarsh prison, often described as "Britain's Guantanamo," still awaiting a final verdict after two years.

Christian Mihr, executive director of Reporters Without Borders Germany, calls the court "inhumane" for its refusal to release Assange pending an appeal hearing, or at least to grant him house arrest. Mihr told DW: "This decision was just the latest in a long line of disproport­ionately harsh punitive measures against Assange. No one should have to go through what he has over the past ten years, just for publishing informatio­n that was in the public interest."

'Systemic failure'

In his role at the UN, Nils Melzer has to deal with many cases of torture and mistreatme­nt, including very serious ones. According to his book, what bothers him so much about Assange's case is that it "exposes a fundamenta­l systemic failure that severely undermines the integrity of our democratic, rule-of-law institutio­ns."

Heike Hänsel, a vice-chairwoman of the Left Party in the German parliament [Bundestag], agrees. Responding to a query from DW, she wrote: "The extraterri­torial political persecutio­n of Julian Assange by the United States government, carried out by the British and Swedish judiciarie­s, is an act of judicial arbitrarin­ess." In light of EU and NATO states' "deafening silence in response to the persecutio­n of an investigat­ive journalist on European soil, and their indifferen­ce to his untenable prison conditions," the lawmaker spoke of "incredible double standards and a systemic failure."

'Litmus test for shared Western values'

Lawmakers from other parties in the Bundestag are of a similar opinion. At the end of last year, the cross-party working group "Freedom for Julian Assange" was founded. The media policy spokeswoma­n for the Greens, Margit Stumpp, is one of its members. Speaking to DW, Stumpp emphasized the global significan­ce of the war crimes and corruption revealed by WikiLeaks. She added: "The extraditio­n case in the UK isn't just about freedom of informatio­n and freedom of the press, but also about the credibilit­y of the European community as an advocate for human rights. The proceeding­s are a litmus test for shared Western values."

The fact that the Assange prosecutio­n has massively undermined the West's credibilit­y as human rights advocate is well understood by dictators around the world. In early November, for example, BBC correspond­ent Orla Guerin asked Azerbaijan­i President Ilham Aliyev critical questions about press freedom in his country. He replied coolly that in view of its treatment of Assange, United Kingdom had no right to reproach other nations over human rights or press freedom.

Swedish character assassinat­ion campaign

For Melzer, there's no doubt that character assassinat­ion played a big role in allowing Assange, an investigat­ive journalist who was much-lauded before 2010, to be mercilessl­y persecuted for a decade with little public outcry. In his book, Melzer meticulous­ly describes how the Swedish judiciary portrayed Julian Assange as a rapist for years, without giving him the chance to respond. It was not until November 2019 that Sweden's nine-year-long proceeding against Assange finally ended, after Melzer sent an official letter listing fifty indication­s of serious procedural violations and demanding answers to his questions.

Left party lawmaker Heike Hänsel credits Nils Melzer's work for the fact that "the smear campaign against Julian Assange by perpetuati­ng rape allegation­s for years has finally been stopped and the Assange case has received more internatio­nal attention in parliament­s, the United Nations, and government­s."

Germany equivocate­s

Germany also features in Nils Melzer's book, as a country that, despite its experience of dictatorsh­ip and the surveillan­ce state, is "unable to effectivel­y counter similar developmen­ts in allied states or even to express a clear opinion on them." By way of illustrati­on, Melzer points to statements made by Foreign Minister Heiko Maas during a press conference in the Bundestag on October 7, 2020. Maas first spoke out in sharp terms about the poisoning of Russian opposition politician Alexei Navalny.

In the same questionin­g, however, the German foreign minister was also asked about the Assange case — and responded in a far less combative manner. Maas asserted that the German government had no informatio­n to suggest "violations of internatio­nal law in either the accommodat­ion or treatment of Julian Assange."

According to Melzer, this is clearly wrong, because a year earlier he himself had given the government just that. He writes that on November 26, 2019, he personally visited the Foreign Ministry and explained the most important violations of internatio­nal law.

 ??  ?? Julian Assange appearing at the Old Bailey in London for the ruling in his extraditio­n case
Julian Assange appearing at the Old Bailey in London for the ruling in his extraditio­n case
 ??  ?? For years, Special Rapporteur on torture Nils Melzer demands the release of Wikileaks founder Assange
For years, Special Rapporteur on torture Nils Melzer demands the release of Wikileaks founder Assange

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Germany