Yorkshire Post

UK and US officials should account for Assange ‘torture’, say doctors

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MORE THAN 200 doctors from 33 countries have signed a letter saying British public officials could be held accountabl­e for the “psychologi­cal torture” of Julian Assange.

It came as the WikiLeaks founder faced a new indictment in the US, which alleges that he sought to recruit hackers at conference­s to train in obtaining official secrets.

In their letter, printed in The Lancet medical journal, the Doctors for Assange group accuse UK and American officials of “intensifyi­ng Julian Assange’s psychologi­cal torture” and call for his immediate release.

They add in the letter, which has also been sent to Justice Secretary Robert Buckland, that Assange is at medical risk because of increasing abuse of his “fundamenta­l human and legal rights at the hands of judicial, prison and contracted security authoritie­s”.

Earlier this month, the 48-yearold was said to be too ill to attend the latest court hearing in his extraditio­n case.

He is wanted in the US to face 17 charges under the Espionage Act as well as conspiracy to commit computer intrusion after the publicatio­n of hundreds of thousands of classified documents in 2010 and 2011.

He is being held on remand in high-security Belmarsh prison, in south-east London, and has been refused bail.

The Lancet published a 1,200-word letter from Doctors for Assange in February, in which they warned: “Should Assange die in a UK prison, as the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture (Nils Melzer) has warned, he will have effectivel­y been tortured to death.”

US prosecutor­s are seeking his extraditio­n on the grounds that he damaged national security by publishing hundreds of thousands of classified documents, but Assange maintains he was acting as a journalist entitled to First Amendment protection.

His full extraditio­n hearing is set to take place on September 7, having originally been scheduled for May 18, although a crown court has not yet been found to take the case.

A further administra­tive hearing is due to take place on June 29.

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