It was a dastardly formality. At a hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court on April 20, Julian Assange 鈥斅燽eamed in via video link from Belmarsh Prison, his carceral home for three years 鈥斅爄s to be , 17 based on the US Espionage Act of 1917.
The final arbiter will be the British home secretary 鈥 the security hardened Priti Patel, who is unlikely to buck the trend. She has shown an enthusiasm for expanding the Official Secrets Act, which would target leakers, recipients of leaked material, and secondary publishers. The investigatory journalism and espionage activities conducted by foreign states, while raising prison penalties from two聽years to 14.
Chief Magistrate, Senior District Judge Paul Goldspring聽was never going to rock the judicial boat. He was to send the case to the home secretary, though he did inform Assange that an appeal to the High Court could be made in the event of approved extradition prior to the issuing of the order.
It seemed a cruel turn-up for the books, given the by District Court Judge Vanessa Baraitser on January 4 last year聽that Assange would be at serious risk of suicide given the risk posed by Special Administrative Measures (SAMs) and the possibility that he would spend the rest of his life in the ADX Florence supermax facility. Assange would be essentially killed off by a penal system renowned for its brutality. Accordingly, it was found that extraditing him would be oppressive within the meaning of the .
The US Department of Justice, ever eager to get their man, appealed to the High Court of England and Wales. They attacked the judge for her carelessness in not seeking reassurances about Assange鈥檚 welfare the prosecutors never asked for. They sought to reassure the British judges that diplomatic assurances had been given. Assange would be spared the legal asphyxiations caused by SAMs or the dystopia of the supermax facility. Besides, his time in US detention would be medically catered for, thereby minimising the suicide risk. There would be no reason for him to take his own life, given the more pleasant surroundings and guarantees for his welfare.
A fatuous additional assurance was also thrown in: the Australian national would have the chance to apply to serve the post-trial and post-appeal phase of his sentence in the country of his birth. All such undertakings would naturally be subject to adjustment and modification by US authorities as they deemed fit. None were binding.
All this glaring nonsense was based on the vital presumption that such undertakings would be honoured by a government whose officials have debated, at stages, . Such talk of assassination was also accompanied by a relentless surveillance operation on the Ecuadorian embassy in London, directed by US intelligence operatives through the auspices of Spanish security company, UC Global. Along the way, US prosecutors even had time in drafting their indictment.
Lord Chief Justice of England and Wales Ian Burnett聽and Lord Justice Timothy Holroyde, in their December 2021 , saw no reason to doubt the good faith of the prosecutors. Assange鈥檚 suicide risk would, given the assurances, be minimised 鈥 he had, the judges reasoned, nothing to fear, given the promise that he would be exempted from the application of SAMs or the privations of ADX Florence. In this most political of trials, the judicial bench seemed unmoved by implications, state power, and the desperation of the US imperium in targeting the publishing of compromising classified information.
On appeal to the British Supreme Court, the grounds of appeal were scandalously whittled away, with no mention of public interest, press freedom, thoughts of assassination, surveillance, or fabrication of evidence. The preoccupying the bench: 鈥淚n what circumstances can an appellate court receive assurances from a requesting state which were not before the court at first instance in extradition proceedings.鈥
The Supreme Court, comprising Lord Reed, Lord Hodge and Lord Briggs, delivered the skimpiest of answers on March 14, without a sliver of reasoning. In of the Deputy Support Registrar:聽鈥淭he Court ordered that permission to appeal be refused because the application does not raise an arguable point of law.鈥
While chief magistrate Goldspring felt duty bound to relay the extradition decision to Patel, Mark Summers QC, representing Assange, also felt duty bound against it.聽 鈥淚t is not open to me to raise fresh evidence and issues, even though there are fresh developments in the case.鈥 The defence team have until May 18 to make what they describe as 鈥渟erious submissions鈥 to the home secretary regarding US sentencing practices and other salient issues.
Various options may present themselves. In addition to challenging the home secretary鈥檚 order, the defence may choose to return to Baraitser鈥檚 original decision, notably on her shabby treatment of press freedom: Assange鈥檚 activities, she witheringly claimed, lacked journalistic qualities.
Outside the channel of the home office, another phase in the campaign to free Assange has now opened. Activist groups, media organisations and supporters are already readying themselves for the next month. Political figures such as former Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn Patel 鈥渢o stand up for journalism and democracy, or sentence a man for life for exposing the truth about the War on Terror鈥.
Amnesty International鈥檚 Secretary General Agn猫s Callamard has also fired another salvo in favour of Assange, that Britain 鈥渉as an obligation not to send any person to a place where their life or safety is at risk and the Government must now abdicate that responsibility鈥.
The prospect of enlivening extraterritorial jurisdiction to target journalism and the publication of national security information, is graver than ever. It signals the power of an international rogue indifferent to due process and fearful of being caught out. But even before this momentous realisation is one irrefutable fact. The from Assange鈥檚 wife, Stella, sharpens the point: Don鈥檛 extradite a man 鈥渢o a country that conspired to murder him鈥.
[Binoy Kampmark lectures at RMIT University. Email: bkampmark@gmail.com.]