Bangkok Post

Assange asks to sit next to trial lawyers

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LONDON: Julian Assange complained he was struggling to follow his extraditio­n hearing on Wednesday as his legal team argued Britain should not send him to the United States because the charges against him were politicall­y motivated.

Mr Assange, 48, faces 18 counts in the US including conspiring to hack government computers and violating an espionage law for publishing thousands of classified diplomatic cables. He faces decades in prison if convicted.

But the WikiLeaks founder complained he was struggling to hear proceeding­s from his position in the dock at Woolwich Crown Court and asked to be able to sit with his lawyers.

“I am as much a participan­t in these proceeding­s as I am at Wimbledon (tennis),” he told the judge. “I cannot communicat­e with my lawyers or ask them for clarificat­ions.”

On the third day of the hearing, Mr Assange said he was also unable to communicat­e privately with his lawyers because of microphone­s in the dock and unnamed US embassy officials in the courtroom.

Mr Assange’s legal team was set to submit a formal applicatio­n for him to leave the dock yesterday after judge Vanessa Baraitser said such a move was not a risk assessment she could make and questioned whether he would still technicall­y be in custody if allowed out of the dock. She said most defendants normally sit in the dock and that she could not make exceptions but she did however ask Mr Assange’s legal team to make a formal applicatio­n that he should be able to move.

James Lewis, for the US government, said he would not object if Mr Assange were allowed to sit in the well of the court handcuffed to a security official.

Earlier, Mr Assange’s lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald, said extraditio­n for political offences was not allowed under the Anglo-US Extraditio­ns Treaty set up in 2003.

Violent crimes and terrorism were the only type of political crimes that the treaty allows people to be extradited for, he said.

His legal team compared Mr Assange to the British Iraq war whistleblo­wer Katharine Gun and Alfred Dreyfus, a Jewish artillery officer in the French army who in 1894 was convicted of treason and shipped to a penal colony off South America’s Atlantic coast.

Mr Fitzgerald also argued that the court needed to consider various protection­s enshrined in both internatio­nal law and the European Convention of Human Rights.

But Mr Lewis for the US disagreed with the claim that espionage is a political offence.

He said earlier this week that Mr Assange had put lives at risk by disseminat­ing classified materials through Wikileaks.

 ?? REUTERS ?? A supporter of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange posts a sign on the Woolwich Crown Court fence on Tuesday in London.
REUTERS A supporter of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange posts a sign on the Woolwich Crown Court fence on Tuesday in London.

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