The last flurry: US Congress and Australian MPs seek Julian Assangeā€™s release

January 19, 2024
Issue 
Activists mobilise outside the Australian Embassy in Britain last September. Photo: Alisdare Hickson/CC BY-SA 4.0/Wikimedia

Julian Assange, publisher of WikiLeaks, will be going into battle with the British justice system yet again on February 20.

Assangeā€™s team will present arguments to the British High Court that his extradition to the United States to face 18 charges under the Espionage Act 1917 would violate various precepts of justice.

His team hope to reverse Justice Jonathan Swiftā€™s decision by the same court lastĀ June 6.

At this point, the number of claims the defence team can make are potentially many.

However, the two judges hearing the case have asked for a substantially shortened argument, showing again that the quality of British mercy is strained and short.

The grounds Assange can raise are vast: CIA-sponsored surveillance; his contemplated assassination; his contemplated abduction; violation of attorney-client privilege; his poor health; the violation of free-speech; a naked, politicised attempt by an imperium to capture one of its greatest and most trenchant critics and the US governmentā€™s bad faith.

Assange campaigners continue to mobilise.

,Ā introduced by Arizona Republican Paul A Gosar to the US Congress on December 13, expresses ā€œthe sense of the House of Representatives that regular journalistic activities are protected under the First Amendment, and that the United States ought to drop all charges against and attempts to extradite Julian Assangeā€.

The resolution is a dramatic shift from the punishing views of the late Democratic Senator Dianne Feinstein, who was one of the firstĀ to suggest that Ā under the Espionage Act for disclosing US cables and classified information in 2010.

The resolution acknowledges, for instance, that the disclosures by WikiLeaks ā€œpromoted public transparency through the exposure of the hiring of child prostitutes by Defense Department contractors, friendly fire incidents, human rights abuses, civilian killings, and United States use of psychological warfareā€. The list could be longer.

Drafters of the resolution finally acknowledge that charging Assange under theĀ Computer Fraud and Abuse ActĀ for alleged conspiracy to help US Army intelligence analyst ChelseaĀ Manning access Defense Department computers was a nonsense.

It was ā€œimpossibleā€: Manning ā€œalready had access to the mentioned computerā€. Furthermore, ā€œthere was no proof Mr Assange had any contact with said intelligence analystā€.

Ire is also directed at the espionage counts, with the resolution noting that ā€œno other publisher has ever been prosecuted under the Espionage Act prior to these 17 chargesā€.

A successful prosecution of Assange ā€œwould set a precedent allowing the United States to prosecute and imprison journalists for First Amendment protected activities, including the obtainment and publication of information, something that occurs on a regular basisā€.

Acknowledgment is made about the importance of media freedoms to promote transparency and protect the Republic, the ā€œsincere and steadfastā€ support for Assange shown by ā€œnumerous human rights, press freedom and privacy rights advocates and organizationsā€ and the desire by ā€œat least 70 Senators and Members of Parliament from Australia, a critical United States ally and Mr Assangeā€™s native countryā€ for his return.

Members of federal parliament,Ā Ā last September to convince Congress that Assangeā€™s prosecution be dropped, have also written to the British Home Secretary, James Cleverly. They requested he ā€œundertake an urgent, thorough and independent assessment of the risks to Mr Assangeā€™s health and welfare in the event that he is extradited to the United Statesā€.

Assange campaigners continue to campaign hard for his release, as the solution to his plight is political.

Members of the ā€œBring Julian Assange Home Parliamentary Group haveĀ Ā Cleverlyā€™s attention to the recent British Supreme Court case ofĀ AAA v Secretary of State for the Home DepartmentĀ which found ā€œthat courts in the United Kingdom cannot just rely on third party assurances by foreign governments but rather are required to make independent assessments of the risk of persecution to individuals before any order is made removing them from the UKā€.

It follows that the approach taken by Lord Justices Burnett and Holroyde inĀ USA v AssangeĀ [2021] EWHC 3133 was, to put it politely, a touch too confident in accepting assurances given by the US government regarding Assangeā€™s treatment, were he to be extradited.

ā€œThese assurances were not tested, nor was there any evidence of independent assessment as to the basis on which they could be given and relied upon.ā€

The groupā€™s conveners point to Assangeā€™s detention in Belmarsh prison since April 2019, his ā€œsignificant health issues, exacerbated to a dangerous degree by his prolonged incarceration, that are of very real concern to us as his elected representativesā€.

They pointedĀ out that both Prime Minister Anthony Albanese and Opposition leader Peter Dutton have said that the ā€œcase has gone on for too longā€.

Continued legal proceedings, both in Britain and then in the US, were he to be extradited, ā€œwould add yet more years to Mr Assangeā€™s detention and further imperil his healthā€.

There are surely fewer better things for a US president in an election year or a Tory government peering at electoral termination to facilitate than the release of Assange.

At the very least, it would show a grudging acknowledgment that the fourth estate is no corpse, but a vital necessity.

[Binoy Kampmark currently lectures at RMIT University.]

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