No Extradition: Julian Assange鈥檚 Father & The Struggle for His Son鈥檚 Freedom
Featuring John Shipton plus Nils Melzer (UN Special Rapporteur on Torture), M.I.A, John Pilger, Lowkey, Lisa Longstaff (Women Against Rape) and others.
Directed by Pablo Navarrete
Alborada Films, 35 mins
The extradition trial of the world鈥檚 most famous whistleblower, Julian Assange, is set to recommence in London next month.
After being holed up in an Ecuadorian embassy for seven years and spending a year and a half largely in solitary confinement in a maximum-security prison, Assange confronts the prospect of being sent to the United States.
If extradited, the WikiLeaks co-founder will face 18 charges and potentially 176 years in jail for the 鈥渃rime鈥 of publishing leaked classified documents that lifted the lid on war crimes carried out by powerful states.
Throughout his ordeal, Assange has counted on the support of millions of people around the world. Few, however, have been as passionate in campaigning for his freedom as John Shipton, Assange鈥檚 father.
In his latest film, , British-Chilean director Pablo Navarrete documents Shipton鈥檚 fight. Navarrete provides a campaign diary of Shipton鈥檚 various trips from Australia to visit his son in Britain and the protests and public forums to demand his freedom.
Shipton speaks to journalist Mohamed Elmaazi about his visits to Belmarsh prison, Assange鈥檚 state and the solidarity he has received from other prisoners. What comes through is his strong conviction to continue until he frees his son.
We also get a sense of the many varied faces of Assange鈥檚 supporters.
Among them is former British Labour MP Chris Williamson, who denounces the fact that while freedom of speech is under attack everywhere, 鈥渢he biggest advocate of freedom of speech is languishing in Belmarsh prison鈥︹
鈥淸Assange鈥檚] only crime is to expose war crimes by the US and the abuse of state power. Here we have a situation where somebody we should be venerating 鈥 is being forced to endure solitary confinement that is tantamount to torture on British soil.鈥
The injustice of Assange鈥檚 case is a common thread in the various voices we hear .
Rapper Lowkey points out: 鈥淎ssange is not being punished for anything he has done wrong. He is being punished for everything he has done right.鈥
Women Against Rape spokesperson Lisa Longstaff also speaks during the film. She notes how, since 2010, her organisation has observed with interest the 鈥渦nusual zeal with which Assange was being pursued; it鈥檚 unlike any rape allegation we have seen anywhere.鈥
According to Longstaff, in Assange鈥檚 case 鈥渞ape and other sexual allegations have been used to pursue a political agenda from the start, intent on actually hiding rape, hiding torture and hiding murder鈥
鈥淭he pursuit of Julian Assange is not about rape. It鈥檚 the US government weaponising and distorting rape in order to punish him for the Wikileaks expos茅s on war crimes, rape and torture.鈥
Human rights lawyer Jennifer Robinson lays out what is at stake in her client鈥檚 case. 鈥淭his is not about hacking 鈥 it is about activities journalists engage in all the time 鈥 and any prosecution and extradition [of Assange] 鈥 will place a massive chill on investigative journalism the world over.鈥
The stakes are clearly very high 鈥 for freedom of speech and democracy, as well as for Assange.
Despite this, Shipton鈥檚 optimism shines through. On several occasions, he tells Assange鈥檚 supporters 鈥渘ot only can we win; we are winning鈥, adding 鈥淚 believe that with your help, we will win.鈥
In this sense, is an important contribution to helping this vital campaign win.
[麻豆传媒 will host an online screening of No Extradition, followed by a Q&A with director, Pablo Navarrete and journalist Mohamed Elmaazi, on September 5 at 7pm (AEST). Book tickets at .]