āIt has been incredible ... Everyone has come together. We held hands. We surrounded Parliament on both sides of the Thames and across the bridges,ā said Stella Moris, at the end of an impressive solidarity action in London for her husband, WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange.
The turnout for the October 8 action exceeded organisersā expectations. āI think there were more than 5000 people ... and Iām assured that all sides were covered,ā said Moris.
āI am so grateful to everyone for having come out, [and] shown your solidarity with Julian. It is so meaningful to all of us, and to Julian, who will be so energised and thankful for the support that you have shown to him. Please keep it up. Letās keep building this.ā
Assange, who is languishing in the high-security Belmarsh prison, awaiting the outcome of a legal challenge against his extradition to the United States, tested positive for COVID-19 on October 8. He was given paracetamol and is now locked in his cell 24 hours a day, Moris told the Independent.
Two days prior to the protest, Moris appeared alongside former US national security advisor John Bolton on Piers Morgan Uncensored. Morgan started the interview by accusing Assange and Wikileaks of not āpracticing journalismā when they published leaks about US war crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq. He wheeled out the lie that Wikileaks had put lives at risk by not redacting information published on its website. Moris demolished this claim.
Morgan then turned to Bolton, to ask why the US is so intent on extraditing Assange to face charges in the US that may lead to him spending the rest of his life in prison, Bolton responded by saying that it was āa small amount of the sentence he actually deservesā.
āHeās no more a journalist than the chair Iām sitting on ... I hope he gets at least 176 years in jail for what he did.ā
Moris responded, labelling Bolton Assangeās āideological nemesisā.
āDuring his time for the [George W] Bush administration, and later the [Donald] Trump administration, [Bolton] sought to undermine the international legal system and ensure the US is not under the International Criminal Courtās jurisdiction,ā said Moris.
āAnd if it was, Mr Bolton might, in fact, be prosecuted under the ICC. He was one of the chief cheerleaders of the Iraq war, which then Julian exposed through these leaks, so he has a conflict of interest here.ā
Bolton argued that Assange would get ādue processā in the US and challenged Moris to say that Assange would not. She replied that the WikiLeaks founder could not possibly get a fair trial in the US, because there is no public interest defence under the nefarious Espionage Act.
āIt is the first time that a publisher has ever been prosecuted under this act, something that constitutional lawyers in the United States have been warning could happen for the past 50 years and the New York Times (NYT) and the Washington Post (WP) say this prosecution strikes at the heart of the First Amendment.ā
Bolton responded with a menacing angle, saying the WP and NYT were wrong and his message to the āesteemed editors of the Washington Post and the New York Timesā was that āwhen you try and equate yourselves with Julian Assange, youāre making a very dangerous gesture, because while youāre saying the First Amendment should apply to him, a different kind of legal system could move in the opposite direction and put you under prosecution as well.ā
Despite Boltonās intervention, support for Assange appears to be growing, given the turnout on October 8. Assange has also been nominated for the European Parliamentās Sakharov Prize for Freedom of Thought.
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