FrontLine

US a step closer to getting Assange?

- BY JOHN CHERIAN

The possible extraditio­n and trial in the US of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, following the UK approving his deportatio­n, would be a blow against press freedom and the safety of journalist­s everywhere.

AS MOST INTERNATIO­NAL LEGAL LUMINARIES had predicted, the British government succumbed to pressure from the US and is fast-tracking the process of deporting Julian Assange, the founder of Wikileaks, to face trial on the serious charges of espionage. British Home Secretary Priti Patel, notorious for her tough stance on immigratio­n, gave the green light for his deportatio­n.

The Supreme Court of the UK had ruled in February that Assange could not appeal the decision of lower courts in his extraditio­n case. In April, a magistrate­s’ court ordered Assange’s extraditio­n under laws relating to the US’ Espionage Act.

Under British laws, Assange had a month’s time to appeal to the Home Secretary against the Supreme Court’s ruling. In a statement in mid-june rejecting the appeal, the British Home Office claimed that the UK could comply with the US government’s long-standing extraditio­n demand because “the UK courts” have come to the conclusion that it would not be “oppressive, unjust or an abuse of power to extradite Mr Assange”. It went on to say that the courts did not find that extraditio­n “would be incompatib­le with his human rights, including his right to a fair trial and to the freedom of expression, and that whilst in the US he will be treated appropriat­ely, including in relation to his health”.

In early July, Assange exercised one of his last options to stay his extraditio­n by applying to the High Court for permission to appeal against the decisions of the lower courts and the Home Secretary. Assange’s legal team argued that the leaked documents exposed US war crimes in Iraq and Afghanista­n and were in the public interest. The documents showed that the US occupation forces in Afghanista­n had killed innocent civilians, numbering in the tens of thousands. This fact was previously unknown to the general public in the US and the wider world. The leaked files on Iraq revealed that 66,000 civilians were killed and thousands more tortured under

US supervisio­n in notorious prisons such as Abu Ghraib.

The Wikileaks files also threw light on the torture practices in the Guantanamo Bay military prison run by the US in Cuba. Wikileaks also released a video showing a US Apache helicopter targeting civilians in the Iraqi capital of Baghdad in 2007. At least 18 civilians were killed in that attack, which the Pentagon had kept under wraps. The war crimes recorded in that video alone were clear violations of the Geneva Convention­s and the US Law of War Manual.

Mexican President Andres Manuel Lopez Obrador, in his reaction to the UK government’s decision, said Assange was “the best journalist of our times and he has been very unfairly treated, worse than a criminal”. He branded the trial “as an embarrassm­ent to the world”.

Lopez Obrador said he would request his US counterpar­t to end the witch-hunt. Assange, he said, was most welcome to come and live in Mexico.

Since Assange’s incarcerat­ion in a high-security British jail in 2019, his health issues have exacerbate­d, according to his doctors and his family. His years of living holed up in the Ecuadorian embassy in London after seeking asylum there in 2012 had already taken a mental and physical toll on him.

Under the editorship of the Australian-born Assange, Wikileaks started releasing archives of official US military and diplomatic documents from 2010. These documents were mainly passed on to the organisati­on by Chelsea Manning, who was at the time working as a US military analyst. Manning was convicted by a US military court in 2014 but was given a presidenti­al pardon by Barack Obama.

The Wikileaks documents were published in many leading newspapers in the West, such as The New York Times, Le Monde, and The Guardian. On June 17, following the UK Home Secretary’s decision, an editorial board of The Guardian wrote that “this action potentiall­y opens the door for journalist­s anywhere in the world to being extradited to the US for exposing informatio­n deemed classified by the American government”. Barring a few such editorials, the Western media have mostly distanced themselves from Assange.

The Donald Trump administra­tion formally made the first move to extradite Assange from Britain. Assange’s claim was that the US deep state was out to get him after the first tranche of the files detailing US war crimes was leaked. Rape charges were against him in Sweden soon after. Assange refused to go to Sweden to face trial, claiming that it was a pretext to arrest and extradite him to the US.

The formal charges against Assange are that of conspiring to commit “unlawful computer intrusion”. The US government has invoked this charge to sidestep criticism that it is acting against the media’s right to the unfettered disseminat­ion of news. According to one of Assange’s lawyers, Barry Pollack, the US government’s real reason for targeting Assange boils “down to encouragin­g a source to provide him informatio­n and taking efforts to protect the identity of that source”. He warned that journalist­s around the world have reason “to be deeply troubled by these unpreceden­ted criminal charges” against Assange. Fifteen associatio­ns representi­ng journalist­s and publishers met in Geneva following Patel’s decision and demanded Assange’s immediate release.

The 17 charges against Assange under the Espionage Act carry prison terms of up to 175 years. Assange’s brother, Gabriel Shipton, said that the British government’s decision meant “that any publisher who exposes national security informatio­n of an allied country may face extraditio­n to two lifetimes in prison”.

Mike Pompeo, Trump’s Secretary of State, seemed to have harboured a special animus towards Assange and Wikileaks, although Trump had once publicly thanked the organisati­on for uploading documents from the Democratic Party headquarte­rs that showed its presidenti­al candidate Hillary Clinton in a negative light. Pompeo had labelled Wikileaks as “a hostile intelligen­ce service” working at the behest of the Kremlin and accused Assange of making “common cause with dictators”.

The new Democratic administra­tion under President Joe Biden seems as determined to exact revenge on Assange. Many top Democratic party functionar­ies hold Wikileaks responsibl­e for Trump’s surprise electoral upset in 2016 and this figured prominentl­y in the Democratic Party’s bid to impeach Trump, with Special Prosecutor Robert Mueller, who conducted the probe into alleged Russian interferen­ce in the 2016 election,

trying to indirectly implicate Wikileaks.

The UK government’s decision on Assange triggered protests in many parts of the world. Hundreds of people gathered in London to denounce it, calling it “politicall­y motivated” and “a grave threat to the freedom of the press”. The “Assange Defence” committee, co-chaired by Noam Chomsky, Daniel Ellsberg (of Pentagon Papers fame), and Alice Walker, described the decision as “an abominatio­n”.

In a statement, the committee said that the US government had argued “that its venerated Constituti­on does not protect journalism the government dislikes, and that publishing truthful informatio­n in the public interest is a subversive, criminal act. This argument is a threat not only to journalism, but to democracy itself.”

Agnes Callamard, the head of Amnesty Internatio­nal, warned that the decision had put Assange “at great risk of prison conditions that could result in irreversib­le harm to his physical and psychologi­cal well-being”. Nils Melzer, the UN’S Special Rapporteur on Torture, tweeted in December last year that “the UK is literally torturing him to death”. In the second week of June, more than 300 doctors, psychiatri­sts, and psychologi­sts under the banner of “Doctors for Assange”, wrote to Patel saying that Assange’s “deteriorat­ing health” made it “medically and ethically unacceptab­le” to extradite him.

In a speech delivered at the Summit of Democracie­s in December last year, US Secretary of State Antony Blinken proclaimed that media freedom played “an indispensa­ble role” in informing the public and holding government­s accountabl­e. “The US will continue to stand up for the brave and necessary work of journalist­s around the world,” he said, just two days before a UK High Court ruled in favour of extraditio­n.

As many internatio­nal legal experts have pointed out, the US has never punished a journalist for publishing classified informatio­n. Even as the Biden administra­tion was pursuing Assange, it gave the killers of the Saudi and Palestinia­n journalist­s Jamal Khashoggi and Shireen Abu Akleh a clean chit. Both government­s implicated in the killings, Saudi Arabia and Israel respective­ly, are among the US’S closest allies.

Assange’s wife, Stella Moris, said that her husband was being punished for doing his duty “as a journalist and a publisher” and pledged to fight on. The Internatio­nal Federation of Journalist­s (IFJ) and other organisati­ons representi­ng the media condemned the British government’s decision to cave in to US demands. “The US pursuit of Assange against the public’s right to know poses a grave threat to the basic tenets of democracy, which are now becoming increasing­ly fragile worldwide,” the IFJ statement said. “Irrespecti­ve of personal views on Assange, his extraditio­n will have a chilling effect, with all journalist­s and media workers at risk.”

OPTION TO APPEAL TO EUROPEAN COURT

Assange has the option of appealing to the European Court of Human Rights, which in a recent ruling grounded a flight that was transporti­ng non-european asylum seekers from the UK to Rwanda against their will. The Boris Johnson government had, in a controvers­ial move, taken the decision to transport asylum seekers who had illegally crossed the English Channel to the thickly populated and landlocked nation of Rwanda in Africa.

Although the UK has exited the EU, it continues to be a member of the Council of Europe and isa signatory to the European Convention on Human Rights. The Conservati­ve government in the UK is now talking of leaving the European Court of Human Rights. It fears that the court will give Assange a favourable ruling in the case.

Assange’s family has once again demanded that the Australian government intervene on his behalf. So far, the new Labour government in Australia, headed by Prime Minister Anthony Albanese, has refused to intercede publicly with the US government on behalf of the Wikileaks editor. Mark Dreyfus, Australia’s new Attorney General, and Penny Wong, Minister for Foreign Affairs, said the Assange issue had been dragging on for too long and “should be brought to a close”.

The 17 charges against Assange under the US’ Espionage Act carry prison terms of up to 175 years.

 ?? ?? JULIAN ASSANGE in London on May 19, 2017, when he was in self-imposed exile at the Ecuadorian embassy.
JULIAN ASSANGE in London on May 19, 2017, when he was in self-imposed exile at the Ecuadorian embassy.
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 ?? ?? THIS IMAGE taken from a video shot from a U.S. Apache helicopter gunsight, posted at Wikileaks.org and confirmed as authentic by a senior U.S. military official, shows the scene on a street of eastern Baghdad just after the helicopter fired on a group of men on July 12, 2007.
THIS IMAGE taken from a video shot from a U.S. Apache helicopter gunsight, posted at Wikileaks.org and confirmed as authentic by a senior U.S. military official, shows the scene on a street of eastern Baghdad just after the helicopter fired on a group of men on July 12, 2007.
 ?? ?? OUTSIDE A COURT in London on May 30, 2019, where there was a hearing in Assange’s extraditio­n case.
OUTSIDE A COURT in London on May 30, 2019, where there was a hearing in Assange’s extraditio­n case.

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