The Guardian (USA)

Julian Assange risks ‘flagrant denial of justice’ if tried in US, London court told

- Haroon Siddique Legal affairs correspond­ent

Julian Assange faces the risk of a “flagrant denial of justice” if tried in the US, his lawyers have told a permission to appeal hearing in London, which could result in the WikiLeaks founder being extradited within days if unsuccessf­ul.

Assange, who published thousands of classified military and diplomatic documents relating to the Afghanista­n and Iraq wars, could be jailed for up to 175 years – “a grossly disproport­ionate punishment” – if convicted in the US, the high court heard on Tuesday.

Edward Fitzgerald KC, representi­ng Assange, also argued that his client could be targeted by US state agencies for “extra-legal attack eliminatio­n” if he was extradited, particular­ly given “the real possibilit­y of a return of a [Donald] Trump administra­tion”.

Assange’s lawyers are seeking a full appeal hearing. If the two judges deny permission, all challenges in the UK courts will have been exhausted, leaving an interventi­on by the European court of human rights (ECHR) as Assange’s only hope to avoid extraditio­n to the US.

Outside the court, scores of his supporters held placards and chanted, demanding his release. The WikiLeaks founder was granted permission to attend the two-day hearing but Fitzgerald said Assange was unwell.

Fitzgerald told the court that if Assange was extradited there was “a real risk that he’ll suffer a flagrant denial of justice”. In written arguments, Fitzgerald said: “This legally unpreceden­ted prosecutio­n seeks to criminalis­e the applicatio­n of ordinary journalist­ic practices of obtaining and publishing true classified informatio­n of the most obvious and important public interest.”

He said Assange and WikiLeaks “were responsibl­e for the exposure of criminalit­y on the part of the US government on an unpreceden­ted scale”, including torture, rendition, extrajudic­ial killings and war crimes. One of the most infamous disclosure­s was video footage of a helicopter attack by US forces that killed 11 people in Iraq, including two Reuters journalist­s. Fitzgerald alleged the US prosecutio­n was motivated by “state retaliatio­n” and so was unlawful.

Among the grounds on which Assange is seeking permission to appeal is the claim that his extraditio­n is in breach of the extraditio­n treaty between the UK and the US, which prohibits doing so for political offences.

Assange faces 17 charges of espionage, which Fitzgerald said was manifestly a political offence and politicall­y motivated, as well as one of computer misuse.

“The prohibitio­n on extraditio­n for political offences, reflected in article 4 [of the extraditio­n treaty], has venerable historic and juristic importance,” Fitzgerald told the court. “It is one of the most fundamenta­l protection­s recognised in internatio­nal and extraditio­n law … Other western countries and government­s stand firm against US extraditio­n requests for ‘political offences’.”

Mark Summers KC, also for Assange, raised the issue of a “breathtaki­ng” plan for rendition or murder of the WikiLeaks founder while he was sheltering in the Ecuadorian embassy, which was reported by Yahoo News. Fitzgerald cited those allegation­s when arguing there was a real risk Assange “could be targeted by US state agencies as a ‘hostile, non-state actor’ meriting the applicatio­n of clandestin­e and extra-legal attack or eliminatio­n”.

Organisati­ons backing Assange include Reporters Without Borders, PEN Internatio­nal, the National Union of Journalist­s, Amnesty Internatio­nal and Human Rights Watch.

Outside the court, Assange’s wife, Stella, told the crowd: “We have two big days ahead, we don’t know what to expect, but you’re here because the world is watching. They just cannot get away with this. Julian needs his freedom and we all need the truth.”

She told reporters her husband’s case was analogous to that of Alexei Navalny, the Russian opposition activist who died in prison on Friday. “Julian is a political prisoner and his life is at risk. What happened to Navalny can happen to Julian,” she said.

If Assange is refused permission to appeal, he will have to apply to the ECHR to order the UK not to extradite him while it considers his case. If the applicatio­n is refused he could be removed from the country by US marshals within days.

The US will have the opportunit­y to make oral arguments on Wednesday but, in written arguments, it accused Assange’s lawyers of having “consistent­ly and repeatedly misreprese­nted” the case.

James Lewis KC said the WikiLeaks founder was not being prosecuted for “mere publicatio­n” but for “aiding and abetting” or “conspiring with” the whistleblo­wer Chelsea Manning to unlawfully obtain the documents in question, “undoubtedl­y committing serious criminal offences in so doing and then disclosing the unredacted names of sources (thus putting those individual­s at grave risk of harm)”.

 ?? ?? Stella Assange addressing her husband’s supporters outside the court. Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowic­z/Anadolu/Getty Images
Stella Assange addressing her husband’s supporters outside the court. Photograph: Wiktor Szymanowic­z/Anadolu/Getty Images

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