Assange Makes Final Appeal Against US Extradition
In a last-ditch effort to avoid extradition to the United States, lawyers for jailed WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange on Friday appealed to the United Kingdom’s High Court to block the transfer.
Assange’s brother, Gabriel Shipton, told Reuters that the Australian publisher’s legal team appealed his extradition, which was formally approved by U.K. Home Secretary Priti Patel last month.
“We also urge the Australian government to intervene immediately in the case to end this nightmare,” Shipton said.
Supporters of Assange held protests ahead of his 51st birthday on Saturday, including one in an open-top double-decker London tour bus that passed by British government buildings in Westminster on Friday. One of the demonstrators, 79-year-old Gloria Wildman, told Agence France-Presse that Assange has “been in prison for telling the truth.”
“If Julian Assange is not free, neither are we; none of us is free,” she added.
Myriad human rights, journalistic, and other groups have condemned Assange’s impending extradition and the U.S. government’s targeting of a journalist who exposed American war crimes. In a Thursday statement, the Australian Journalists Union said that “the charges against Assange are an affront to journalists everywhere and a threat to press freedom.”
Assange—who suffers from physical and mental health problems including heart and respiratory issues—faces U.S. charges including Espionage Act violations for which he faces up to 175 years behind bars if fully convicted.
Among the classified materials published by WikiLeaks—many provided by whistleblower Chelsea Manning—are the infamous “Collateral Murder” video showing a U.S. Army helicopter crew killing a group of Iraqi civilians, the Afghan War Diary, and the Iraq War Logs, which revealed American and allied war crimes.
In a video published by WikiLeaks on Friday, Conservative British parliamentarian David Davis said that “the simple truth is, Assange won’t get what we think of as a fair trial in the U.S.”
“And in addition to that, there’s a wider issue of imbalance in the U.K.-U.S. extradition treaty,” he asserted. “When America requests an extradition from Britain, they have to have reasonable suspicion and the home secretary must process the request.”
The MP added that extradited Britons “face an alien justice system” in which “they’re frog-marched in chains, they’re jailed with hardened criminals, they’re denied access to legal papers, they face really coercive plea-bargain systems which essentially say either plead guilty or face a huge length of time in prison.”
“That sort of thing,” Davis said, “does not give the sort of justice system that we’re used to in the United Kingdom.”
Originally published at Commondreams.org, written by Brett Wilkins.