Julian Assange extradition delayed by further tech, coronavirus issues – Sydney Morning Herald

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"No publisher of information has ever been successfully prosecuted for publishing national security information ever," Lewis said.

He told the court that if convicted, the 49-year-old would likely spend the rest of his life in jail.

"Under the best-case scenario we are looking at a sentence somewhere between, 20 years, if everything goes brilliantly to 175 years," he said.

Lewis spent around 90 minutes giving evidence before an audio clip interrupted his testimony. The judge walked out as the tech troubles interfered with the hearing which was then adjourned until lunch.

But after lunch court officials could not re-establish a link to Lewis and the hearing was called off for the rest of the day and will resume on Tuesday.

It is not the first time that the hearing has experienced difficulties connecting to, or hearing clearly, witnesses who are choosing to give evidence remotely as a result of the pandemic.

The hearing only resumed at the Old Bailey in central London on Monday following a two-day break after a coronavirus scare, when the wife of one of the lawyers representing the US government developed symptoms which she feared might be COVID-19.

The test proved negative and her diagnosis was no more than a common cold.

But when court resumed on Monday, Assange's legal team asked District Judge Vanessa Baraitser to order that everyone must wear masks in the courtroom.

She refused.

Filmmaker John Pilger stands with supporters of the Wikileaks founder Julian Assange as they gather outside the Old Bailey.Credit:Getty

"Those that wish to wear masks in the well of the court are welcome to do so unless they are directly addressing the court and I understand masks are available for this purpose," she said.

"But there is no obligation to do so and I make no direction ... in this regard."

She instead said that anyone, including Assange who is sitting behind a glass wall in the dock, could wear a mask if they wished.

Assange wore a mask to his extradition hearing for the first time but his QC Mark Summer claimed there had been "difficulties in getting him masks."

Assange's extradition hearing was already delayed by several months due to the pandemic. Assange has subsequently claimed that his incarceration is a risk to his health, exacerbated by coronavirus.

He is being held at Belmarsh prison on London's outskirts. His extradition hearing is expected to run until October.

Our weekly newsletter will deliver expert analysis of the race to the White House from our US correspondent Matthew Knott. Coming soon. Sign up now for the Herald's newsletter here, The Age's here, Brisbane Times' here and WAtoday's here.

Latika Bourke is a journalist for The Sydney Morning Herald and The Age, based in London.

Original post:
Julian Assange extradition delayed by further tech, coronavirus issues - Sydney Morning Herald

Julian Assange extradition hearing: Punishing the publisher – Amnesty International

The last time I saw Julian Assange he looked tired and wan.

Dressed neatly in casual business attire, the Wikileaks founder was sitting in a glass-enclosed dock, at the back of a courtroom adjoining Belmarsh high security prison in London, flanked by two prison officers.

I had travelled from the US to observe the hearing. He had travelled via tunnel from his cell to the courtroom.

Sitting 20 feet away from Julian Assange, I was struck by how much of a shadow of his former self he had become.

Today, Julian Assange will be in court again, for the resumption of proceedings that will ultimately decide on the Trump administrations request for his extradition to the US.

But it is not just Julian Assange that will be in the dock. Beside him will sit the fundamental tenets of media freedom that underpin the rights to freedom of expression and the publics right to access to information. Silence this one man, and the US and its accomplices will gag others, spreading fear of persecution and prosecution over a global media community already under assault in the US and in many other countries worldwide.

The stakes really are that high. If the UK extradites Assange, he would face prosecution in the USA on espionage charges that could send him to prison for decades possibly in a facility reserved for the highest security detainees and subjected to the strictest of daily regimes, including prolonged solitary confinement. All for doing something news editors do the world over publishing public interest information provided by sources .

Indeed, President Donald Trump has called Wikileaks disgraceful and said that its actions in publishing classified information should carry the death penalty

The chilling effect on other publishers, investigative journalists and any person who would dare to facilitate the publication of classified information of government wrongdoing would be immediate and severe. And the US would boldly go beyond its own borders with a long arm to reach non-citizens, like Assange, who is Australian.

You dont need to be an expert in extradition law to understand that the charges against Assange are politically-motivated.

The US governments relentless pursuit of Assange - and the UKs willing participation in his hunt and capture - has now landed him in a prison typically reserved for seasoned criminals. It has diminished him both physically and emotionally often to the point of disorientation. Breaking him by isolating Assange from family, friends and his legal team, seems part and parcel of the USs strategy and it seems to be working.

You dont need to know the vagaries of extradition law to understand that the charges against Assange are not only classic political offences and thus barred under extradition law, but more crucially, the charges are politically-motivated.

The 17 charges levelled by the US under the 1918 Espionage Act could bring 175 years in prison; add a conviction on the single computer fraud charge (said to complement the Espionage Act by dragging it into the computer era), and you get another gratuitous five years. Assange is the only publisher ever to bear the brunt of such espionage charges.

There is no doubt that the charges are politically-motivated under this US administration, which has all but convicted Assange in the public arena. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo has claimed that Wikileaks is a hostile intelligence service whose activities must be mitigated and managed. The flagrantly unfair prosecution of Assange is an example of how far the US will go to manage the flow of information about government wrongdoing and thus undermine the publics right to know.

Assange was on Barack Obamas radar, too, but the Obama administration declined to prosecute Assange. Current US Attorney General William Barr, however, has turned out not one, but two indictments since 2019, the latest at the end of June. That second indictment was a surprise not only to Assanges defence team, but to the Crown lawyer and the judge who were also taken unawares by the new indictment.

Earlier this year, sitting 20 feet away from Julian Assange, I was struck by how much of a shadow of his former self he had become. He did spontaneously stand up several times during that week of hearings to address the judge. He told her he was confused. He told her he could not properly hear the proceedings. He said that barriers in the prison and in court meant that he had not been able to consult with his lawyers. He was not technically permitted to address the judge directly, but he did repeatedly, flashes of the aggressive tactics used in the past to advocate for himself and the principles he has espoused.

Publishing such information is a cornerstone of media freedom and the public's right to access information. It must be protected, not criminalized.

If Julian Assange is extradited it will have far reaching human rights implications, setting a chilling precedent for the protection of those who publish leaked or classified information that is in the public interest.

Publishing such information is a cornerstone of media freedom and the public's right to access information. It must be protected, not criminalized.

Julia Hall is Amnesty International'sexpert on human rights in Europe

Originally posted here:
Julian Assange extradition hearing: Punishing the publisher - Amnesty International

WATCH: On the Journalism of Julian Assange With John Pilger, Craig Murray, Andrew Fowler and Serena Tinari – Consortium News

Watch Pilger, Murray, Fowler and Tinari Sunday at 6 am EDT, 11 am BST, and 8 pm AEST discussing the journalism of the imprisoned WikiLeaks publisher who is facing extradition to the U.S.

Reporting after the first week of Julian Assanges reconvened extradition trial, veteran journalists John Pilger, Andrew Fowler and Serena Tinari, and former UK ambassador and writer Craig Murray join #FreeTheTruth as we turn the spotlight onto the journalism of Julian Assange.

The ongoing extradition hearing in Old Bailey, London has huge significance in terms of freedom of the press, whistleblower protection, extraterritorial rights of the U.S. state and the publics right to know about the crimes governments commit in their name including the rights of those tortured, maimed and killed in Iraq and Afghanistan to know the truth about crimes undertaken by occupying forces.)

Also under the spotlight are the political motives of the prosecution, plus the covering up of war crimes, spying on Assanges legally privileged conversations, Julians right to a fair trial and so on as detailed:

1) so throughly by Prof Nils Melzer, UN rapporteur on torture and arbitrary detention here.

2) by journalist Max Blumenthal (re the spying) here.

3) by historian Mark Curtis and journalist Matt Kennard at DeclassifiedUK re concerns about judicial conflicts of interest here (7 instances) here.

Hosted by Deepa Driver.

Be sure to watch the Consortium News daily reports on court proceedings and to read Craig Murrays accounts in his daily series: Your Man in the Public Gallery, at craigmurray.org and on Consortium News.

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WATCH: On the Journalism of Julian Assange With John Pilger, Craig Murray, Andrew Fowler and Serena Tinari - Consortium News

Trump targeting WikiLeaks’ Assange as ‘political enemy’, UK court told – Reuters

LONDON (Reuters) - WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is wanted by the United States because he is a political enemy of President Donald Trump, his London extradition hearing was told on Wednesday.

A supporter of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange protests outside the Old Bailey, the Central Criminal Court ahead of a hearing to decide whether Assange should be extradited to the United States, in London, Britain September 9, 2020. REUTERS/Henry Nicholls

Australian-born Assange, 49, is fighting against being sent to the United States, where he is charged with conspiring to hack government computers and violating an espionage law over the release of confidential cables by WikiLeaks in 2010-2011.

Paul Rogers, a professor of peace studies at Britains Bradford University, told Londons Old Bailey court that the timing of the U.S. prosecution was connected to Assanges political views and Trumps hostility toward him.

The evidence does support very strongly ... this does appear to be a political trial, Rogers said.

Assange and WikiLeaks enraged the U.S. government a decade ago by publishing thousands of secret American documents, but he was not charged with any criminal offense at the time.

His supporters see him as a champion of free speech exposing abuses of power and hypocrisy by Washington and regard his prosecution as threat to journalism. U.S. authorities say he recklessly endangered the lives of sources with his releases.

Rogers said the Trump administration viewed Assange as a political enemy because of his opinions. Assanges defense team are arguing the U.S. case is politically-motivated, something which would bar his extradition.

The opinions and views of Mr Assange, demonstrated in his words and actions with the organization WikiLeaks over many years, can be seen as very clearly placing him in the crosshairs of dispute with the philosophy of the Trump administration, Rogers said in his statement to the court.

James Lewis, the lawyer representing the United States, challenged the assertion the case was politically-motivated, saying U.S. federal prosecutors were forbidden to consider political opinion in making their decisions.

Im not saying they are acting in bad faith, Rogers said. Im saying that at a different level, a political decision was taken to investigate this further after it had lapsed for eight years.

Assange was warned by the judge on Tuesday he would be removed from the courtroom and tried in his absence if he interrupted proceedings after Assange shouting nonsense at Lewis.

More here:
Trump targeting WikiLeaks' Assange as 'political enemy', UK court told - Reuters

‘Absolute And Arbitrary Power’: Killing Extinction Rebellion And Julian Assange – Scoop.co.nz

Thursday, 10 September 2020, 4:05 pmArticle: Media Lens

Theuse and misuse of George Orwells truth-telling is sowidespread that we can easily miss his intended meaning. Forexample, with perfect (Orwellian) irony, the BBC has astatue of Orwell outside Broadcasting House, bearing the inscription:

Ifliberty means anything at all, it means the right to tellpeople what they do not want tohear.

Fine words, but suitablyambiguous: the BBC might argue that it is merely exercisingits liberty in endlessly channelling the worldview ofpowerful interests crass propaganda that many peoplecertainly do not want to hear.

Orwells realintention is made clearer in this secondcomment:

Journalism is printing whatsomeone else does not want printed: everything else ispublic relations.

In this line attributedto him (although there is some debateabout where it originated), Orwell was talking about power real journalism challenges the powerful. And thisis the essential difference between the vital work ofWikiLeaks and the propaganda role performed bystate-corporate media like the BBC every day on virtuallyevery issue.

On September 6, the Mail on Sunday ran twoeditorials, side by side. The first was titled, Asinister, shameful attack on free speech. It decried theExtinction Rebellion action last Friday to blockadethree newspaper printing presses owned by Rupert MurdochsUK News. The second editorial, as we will see below, was afeeble call not to send Julian Assange to the US, on the eveof his crucial extradition hearing inLondon.

Extinction Rebellions protest, lasting justa few hours, temporarily prevented the distribution ofMurdoch newspapers, such as the Sun and The Times, as wellas other titles printed by Murdochs presses, includingthe Daily Mail, Mail on Sunday and the DailyTelegraph.

The Mail on Sunday editorial predictablycondemned the protesters supposed attempt atcensorship, declaring it:

athrowback to the very worst years of trade union militancy,which came close to strangling a free press and which wasonly defeated by the determined action of RupertMurdoch.

The paperfumed:

The newspaper blockade was ashameful and dangerous attempt to crush free speech, and itshould never be repeated.

This was thepropaganda message that was repeated across much of themainstream media, epitomised by the emptyrhetoric of Prime Minister Boris Johnson:

Afree press is vital in holding the government and otherpowerful institutions to account on issues critical for thefuture of our country, including the fight against climatechange. It is completely unacceptable to seek to limit thepublics access to news in this way.

Johnsonscomments could have been pure satire penned by Chris Morris,Mark Steel or the late Jeremy Hardy. Closer to the grubbytruth, a different Johnson Samuel describedthe free press as Scribbling on the backs ofadvertisements.

As Media Lens has repeatedlydemonstrated over the past 20 years, it is thestate-corporate media, including BBC News, that hasendlessly limited the publics access to news bydenying the public the full truth about climate breakdown,UK/US warmongering, including wars on Iraq, Afghanistan andLibya, the arming of Saudi Arabia and complicity in thatbrutal regimes destruction of Yemen, UK governmentsupport for the apartheid state of Israel even as it crushesthe Palestinian people, the insidious prising open of theNHS to private interests, and numerous other issues ofpublic importance.

When has the mythical freepress ever fully and properly held to account BorisJohnson or any of his predecessors in 10 Downing Street? Whocan forget that Tony Blair, steeped in the blood of so manyIraqis, is still held in esteem as an elder statesman whoseviews are sought out by mainstream news outlets,including BBC News and the Guardian? As John Pilger saidrecently:

Always contrast JulianAssange with Tony Blair. One will be fighting for his lifein court on 7 Sept for the crime of exposing warcrimes while the other evades justice for the paramountcrime of Iraq.

Health Secretary MattHancock, who has presided over a national public healthdisaster with soaring rates of mortality during thecoronavirus pandemic, had the affront to tweeta photograph of himself with a clutch of right-wing papersunder his arm, declaring:

Totallyoutrageous that Extinction Rebellion are trying to suppressfree speech by blockading newspapers. They must be dealtwith by the full force of the law.

Itis Hancock himself, together with government colleagues andadvisers not least Johnson and his protector, DominicCummings who should be dealt with by the full forceof the law. As Richard Horton, editor of The Lancetmedical journal, saidof Boris Johnson in May:

you droppedthe ball, Prime Minister. That was criminal. And you knowit.

Extinction Rebellion (XR) explainedsuccinctly via Twitter their reason for their totallyoutrageous action:

Dear Newsagents,we are sorry for disruption caused to your business thismorning. Dear Mr. Murdoch, we are absolutely not sorry forcontinuing to disrupt your agenda this morning. @rupertmurdoch#FreeTheTruth#ExtinctionRebellion#TellTheTruth

Anarticleon the XR website, simply titled, We do not have a freepress, said:

We are in an emergencyof unprecedented scale and the papers we have targeted arenot reflecting the scale and urgency of what is happening toour planet.

One of the XR protesterswas Steve, a former journalist for 25 years who hadworked for the Sun, Daily Mail, the Telegraph and The Times.He was filmed on location during the protest. He explainedthat he was participating, in part, because he is worriedabout the lack of a future for his children. And a majorreason for how we got to this point is that journalistsare:

stuck inside a toxic system wherethey dont have any choice but to tell the stories thatthese newspapers want to be told.

Hecontinued:

Every person who works onNews International or a Mail newspaper knows what story isor isnt acceptable for their bosses. And their bossesknow that because they know whats acceptable to Murdochor Rothermere or the other billionaires that run 70 per centof our media.

Steve said he left thatsystem because he couldnt bear the way itworked.

The most recent reportby the independent MediaReform Coalition on UK media ownership, published in2019, revealed the scale of the problem of extremelyconcentrated media ownership. Just three companies Rupert Murdochs News UK, Daily Mail Group and Reach(publisher of the Mirror titles) dominate 83 per centof the national newspaper market (up from 71 per cent in2015). When online readers are included, just five companies News UK, Daily Mail Group, Reach, Guardian and Telegraph dominate nearly 80 per cent of the market.

As wenotedof XRs worthy action:

Before anyonedenounces this as an attack on the free press there is no free press. There is a billionaire-owned,profit-maximising, ad-dependent corporate press that hasknowingly suppressed the truth of climate collapse and theneed for action to protect corporateprofits.

Zarah Sultana, Labour MP forCoventry South, indicatedher support too:

A tiny number ofbillionaires own vast swathes of our press. Their papersrelentlessly campaign for right-wing politics, promoting theinterests of the ruling class and scapegoating minorities. Afree press is vital to democracy, but too much of our pressisnt free at all.

By contrast,Labour leader Keir Starmer once again demonstrated hisestablishment credentials as a safe pair of hands bycondemning XRs protest. Craig Murray commented:

Ata time when the government is mooting designating ExtinctionRebellion as Serious Organised Crime, right wing bequiffedmuppet Keir Starmer was piously condemning the group,stating: The free press is the cornerstone of democracyand we must do all we can to protectit.

Starmer had also commented:

Denyingpeople the chance to read what they choose is wrong and doesnothing to tackle climate change.

Butdenying people the chance to read what they would choose the corporate-unfriendly truth on climate change isexactly what the corporate media, misleadingly termedmainstream media, is all about.

Media activistand lecturer Justin Schlosberg made a number of cogentobservations on press freedom in a Twitter thread(beginning here):

9times out of 10 when people in Britain talk about protectingpress freedom what they really mean is protecting presspower.

He pointed out the giantmyth promulgated by corporate media, forever trying toresist any attempt to curb their power; namelythat:

Britains mainstream [sic]press is a vital pillar of our democracy, covering adiversity of perspectives and upholding professionalstandards of journalismthe reality is closer to the exactinverse of such claims. More than 10 million people votedfor a socialist party at the last election (13 million in2017) and polls have consistently shown that majority ofBritish public opposeausterity.

Schlosbergcontinued:

The diversity of ournational press [ ] covers the political spectrum fromliberal/centre to hard right and has overwhelmingly backedausterity economics for the best part of the last 4decades [moreover] the UK press enjoys an unrivalledinternational reputation for producing a diatribe of fake,racist and misogynistic hate speech over anything that canbe called journalism.

He rightlyconcluded:

ironically one of thegreatest threats to democracy is a press that continues toweave myths in support of its vested interests, and a BBCthat continues to uncritically absorbthem.

Alongside the Mail on Sundaysbillionaire-owned, extremist right-wing attack on climateactivists highlighting a non-existent free press, thepaper had an editorialthat touched briefly on the danger to all journalists shouldWikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange be extradited from theUK to the US:

the charges against MrAssange, using the American Espionage Act, might be usedagainst legitimate journalists in thiscountry.

The implication was thatAssange is not to be regarded as a legitimatejournalist. Indeed, the billionaire Rothermere-ownedviewspaper a more accurate description thannewspaper made clear its antipathy towardshim:

Mr Assanges revelations ofleaked material caused grave embarrassment to Washington andare alleged to have done material damagetoo.

The term embarrassmentrefers to the exposure of US criminal actions threateningthe great rogue states ability to commit similar crimesin future: not embarrassing (Washington is without shame),but potentially limiting.

The Mail on Sundaycontinued:

Mr Assange has been aspectacular nuisance during his time in this country,lawlessly jumping bail and wasting police time by takingrefuge in embassy of Ecuador. The Mail on Sunday disapprovesof much of what he has done, but we must also ask if hiscurrent treatment is fair, right orjust.

The insinuations and subtlesmears embedded in these few lines have been repeatedlydemolished (see this extensive analysis,for example). And there was no mention that Nils Melzer, theUNSpecial Rapporteur on Torture, as well as numerous doctors, healthexperts and humanrights organisations, have strongly condemned the UKsappalling abuse of Assange and demanded his immediaterelease.

Melzer has accusedthe British government of torturingAssange:

the primary purpose of tortureis not necessarily interrogation, but very often torture isused to intimidate others, as a show to the public whathappens if you dont comply with the government. That isthe purpose of what has been done to Julian Assange. It isnot to punish or coerce him, but to silence him and to do soin broad daylight, making visible to the entire world thatthose who expose the misconduct of the powerful no longerenjoy the protection of the law, but essentially will beannihilated. It is a show of absolute and arbitrarypower.

Melzer also spoke about theprice he will pay for challenging thepowerful:

I am under no illusions thatmy UN career is probably over. Having openly confronted twoP5-States (UN security council members) the way I have, I amvery unlikely to be approved by them for another high-levelposition. I have been told, that my uncompromisingengagement in this case comes at a politicalprice.

This is the reality of theincreasingly authoritarian world we are living in.

Theweak defence of Assange now being seen in even right-wingmedia, such as the Mail on Sunday, indicates a real fearthat any journalist could in future be targeted bythe US government for publishing material that might angerWashington.

In an interviewthis week, Barry Pollack, Julian Assanges US lawyer,warned of the very dangerous precedent that could beset in motion with Assanges extradition to theUS:

The position that the U.S. istaking is a very dangerous one. The position the U.S. istaking is that they have jurisdiction all over the world andcan pursue criminal charges against any journalist anywhereon the planet, whether theyre a U.S. citizen or not. Butif theyre not a U.S. citizen, not only can the U.S.pursue charges against them but that person has no defenseunder the First Amendment.

In starkcontrast to the weak protestations of the Mail on Sunday andthe rest of the establishment media, Noam Chomsky pointedout the simple truth in a recent interviewon RT (note the dearth of Chomsky interviews on BBC News,and consider why his views are not soughtafter):

Julian Assange committed thecrime of letting the general population know things thatthey have a right to know and that powerful states dontwant them to know.

Likewise, JohnPilger issueda strong warning:

This week, one of themost important struggles for freedom in my lifetime nearsits end. Julian Assange who exposed the crimes of greatpower faces burial alive in Trumps America unless he winshis extradition case. Whose side are youon?

Pilger recommended an excellent in-depthpiece by Jonathan Cook, a former Guardian/Observerjournalist, in which Cook observed:

Foryears, journalists cheered Assanges abuse. Now theyvepaved his path to a US gulag.

PeterOborne is a rare example of a right-leaning journalist whohas spoken out strongly in defence of Assange. Oborne wrotelast week in Press Gazettethat:

Future generations of journalistswill not forgive us if we do not fightextradition.

He set out the followingscenario:

Lets imagine a foreigndissident was being held in Londons Belmarsh Prisoncharged with supposed espionage offences by the Chineseauthorities.

And that his real offence wasrevealing crimes committed by the Chinese Communist Party including publishing video footage of atrocities carriedout by Chinese troops.

To put it another way, thathis real offence was committing the crime ofjournalism.

Let us further suppose the UN SpecialRapporteur on Torture said this dissident showed all thesymptoms typical for prolonged exposure to psychologicaltorture and that the Chinese were putting pressure on theUK authorities to extradite this individual where he couldface up to 175 years in prison.

The outrage fromthe British press would bedeafening.

Obornecontinued:

There is one crucialdifference. It is the US trying to extradite the co-founderof Wikileaks.

Yet there has been scarcely a word inthe mainstream British media in hisdefence.

In fact, as we haverepeatedly highlighted,Assange has been the subject of a propagandablitz by the UK media, attackingand smearinghim, over and over again, often in the pages of theliberal Guardian.

At the time of writing,neither ITV political editor Robert Peston nor BBCNews political editor LauraKuenssberg appear to have reported the Assangeextradition case. They have not even tweeted about it once,even though they are both very active on Twitter. In fact,the last time Peston so much as mentioned Assange on hisTwitter feed was 2017.Kuenssbergs record is even worse; her Twitter silenceextends all the way back to 2014.These high-profile journalists are supposedly primeexemplars of the very best high-quality UK newsbroadcasters, maintaining the values of a free press,holding politicians to account and keeping the publicinformed.

On September 7, John Pilger gave an addressoutside the Old Bailey in London, just before JulianAssanges extradition hearing began there. His words werea powerful rebuke to those so-called journalists thathave maintained a cowardly silence, or worse. Theofficial truth-tellers of the media thestenographers who collaborate with those in power, helpingto sell their wars are, Pilger says, Vichyjournalists.

He continued:

Itis said that whatever happens to Julian Assange in the nextthree weeks will diminish if not destroy freedom of thepress in the West. But which press? The Guardian? TheBBC, The New York Times, the Jeff Bezos WashingtonPost?

No, the journalists in theseorganizations can breathe freely. The Judases on theGuardian who flirted with Julian, exploited hislandmark work, made their pile then betrayed him, havenothing to fear. They are safe because they areneeded.

Freedom of the press now rests with thehonorable few: the exceptions, the dissidents on theinternet who belong to no club, who are neither rich norladen with Pulitzers, but produce fine, disobedient,moral journalism those like JulianAssange.

DC &DE

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'Absolute And Arbitrary Power': Killing Extinction Rebellion And Julian Assange - Scoop.co.nz

Tips and Murmurs: Bob Carr whistles a different tune on Julian Assange – Crikey

Bob Carr whistles a new tune on Julian Assange (if only he'd done anything about it?) while Qantas seems to be reaping the pandemic rewards. Plus other tips from the Crikey bunker.

That was then, this is now Ah, the luxury of being a former politician, when you finally have the platform and influence to really make a difference. Just days after former foreign affairs minister Julie Bishop lamented the cuts in the foreign aid budget -- a process she had overseen and defended in 2014, 2015, 2016, 2017 and 2018 -- we have Bob Carr, who continues his newfound interest in the case of Julian Assange:

"He faces the prospect of a living death inside an American prison, in very cruel conditions, because he let the world know about an American war crime," he told Nine News. Not much to quarrel with that.

So why, back in 2012 (when Carr held the obscure post of Australian foreign affairs minister), did he say of Assange: "Theres an amorality about whats been at work here; secrets being released for the sake of being released without inherent justification.

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Tips and Murmurs: Bob Carr whistles a different tune on Julian Assange - Crikey

Julian Assange warned against interrupting witnesses in extradition hearing – ComputerWeekly.com

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange was warned by the judge in his extradition case that he would be removed from court if he continued to interrupt witnesses.

The judge, Vanessa Baraitser, told the 49-year-old that he would face being permanently banned from hearings.

The incident took place as a lawyer for the US questioned the expertise of witnesses who appeared on behalf of Assange.

The WikiLeaks founder faces allegations that he conspired with computer hackers to encourage them to obtain secret US government documents, after being re-arrested this week.

The allegations were added, in a superseding indictment, to 17 charges under the 1917 Espionage Act related to WikiLeaks publishing a series of leaks from Chelsea Manning, a former US Army soldier turned whistleblower, in 2010-11.

The hearing revealed differences between the defence lawyers over the charges levelled against Assange in the US indictment.

Speaking on the second day of the hearing at the Old Bailey, Clifford Stafford Smith, founder of legal support non-profit organisation Reprieve, told the court that the charity had used US cables leaked by WikiLeaks in its cases.

He gave evidence on WikiLeaks publication of the Afghan and Iraq War Logs, the Guantanamo Files, and the US diplomatic cables.

He said WikiLeaks disclosures on drone killings had contributed to a sea change in peoples attitudes about the use of drones.

I feel my countrys reputation was seriously damaged by what we have to term as criminal actions, he said.

He said one US journalist, Bilal Abdul Kareem who reported from Syria on the struggle against the regime of its president, Bashir Assad had been targeted for assassination five times, including hellfire missiles from drones.

An ongoing case is testing whether the US has the right to assassinate its own citizens. I find it deeply troubling, he said.

Reprieve had uncovered evidence that individuals detailed at Guantanamo Bay were not being held for terrorism reasons, but because the US had paid bounties for them.

Pervez Musharraf, former president of Pakistan, boasted in his book In the line of firethat perhaps half of the Guantanamo detainees had been sold for bounties to the US by Pakistan. They were sold with a story normally, in my experience, bogus to induce payment, Stafford Smith said in a witness statement.

I felt that Guantanamo was doing our nation damage. I thought, by and large, the government would make some mistakes, but would get it right. I was wrong, he told the court.

He said WikiLeaks leaks on Guantanamo had been important in making public allegations against clients he was representing in the detention camp.

They were the very worst that the US authorities could confect against our clients, but on the other hand they are very important because the world did not know the allegations against my clients, he said.

In a witness statement, Stafford Smith said he had taken 30 pages of evidence from his client Moazzam Begg on how he was tortured and how he had witnessed a murder at Bagram Air Force Base in Iraq.

The statement was censored because torture and murder reflected methods and means of interrogation.

I would never believe that my government would do what it did, he said. We are talking about criminal offences of torture, rendition, holding people against the law and, I am sad to say, murder.

The WikiLeaks documents referred to statements about another of Stafford Smiths clients, Binyam Mohamed, as if they were true, without mentioning the fact he was rendered to Morocco for 18 months where the interrogators took a razor blade to his genitals, Stafford Smith said in written evidence

A UK court found that the UK had been mixed up in Mohameds torture.

The UK intelligence agencies leaked Mohameds statement, obtained under torture, to the BBC.

Stafford Smith told the court that it was only because he was at the BBC that he was able to prevent the journalist from using the statement, which had been obtained in violation of the UN Convention Against Torture.

James Lewis, representing the US, told the court that Stafford Smith had produced a 97-paragraph statement, but did not mention WikiLeaks until paragraph 31.

Would it surprise you to learn that there are no charges against Mr Assange or anyone else for publishing those cables or any cables you mention in your statement?

Lewis said the only thing Assange was being charged with was leaking documents that put the names of individuals in Iran, Afghanistan and around the world, who were at risk.

Stafford Smith said that in a US court case, the US could produce a witness that could give wide-ranging testimony.

Mr Stafford you are making this up. Show me where the charges show the publication of documents, said Lewis.

Stafford Smith said: I can tell you how American cases are prosecuted.

Lewis then asked Stafford Smith: Are you saying the US Attorney General is lying?

Stafford Smith said that the most damaging thing he had seen during his 19 years was over-classification by US officials.

He said that Begg, who was detained in Guantanamo, had given him 30 pages of material on how he had been tortured, but it was classified for national security reasons. That over-qualification, where we classify evidence of torture, is profoundly wrong.

Stafford Smith said he accepted that it was not right to put informants in harms way.

Lewis referred to a book written by investigative journalist David Leigh. Leigh was concerned that many of the documents obtained by WikiLeaks mentioned informants.

Assanges response, as reported in the book, was: If they get killed, they deserve it.

Stafford Smith said: I really would never judge someone by what is published in a book. I agree you should never get someone killed.

Lewis said the charges against Assange only related to a small number of documents published by WikiLeaks.

Stafford Smith said he did not have that confidence in US court cases, and that the US could introduce new allegations against Assange.

They could potentially, through their first witness, introduce the book by David Leigh, and the rules of hearsay have a massive lacuna in it. I wish I had your confidence, he said.

The judge adjourned the hearing after Assange interrupted Stafford Smith.

'If you interrupt proceedings, it is open to me to proceed in your absence. This is obviously something I would not wish to do, she said.

Link:

Julian Assange warned against interrupting witnesses in extradition hearing - ComputerWeekly.com

WikiLeaks Julian Assange fights extradition to the U.S. in top London court – CNBC

WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, one of the world's most high-profile whistleblowers, willfight his extradition to the U.S. this week, after failing to delay the hearing on Monday.

Assange is wanted inthe U.S. over the publication of hundreds of thousands of classified documents in 2010 and 2011.

The hearing, at London's Old Bailey, is being heard by District Judge Vanessa Baraitser. It began in February but it was pushed back as a result of the coronavirus.

The U.S.Justice Departmentissued a newindictmentin June alleging that Assange conspired with members of hacking organizations and tried to recruit hackers at conferences in Europe and Asia who could provide WikiLeaks with classified information.

Assange's lawyer, Edward Fitzgerald QC,argued Monday that the latest indictment arrived too late for his team to review and respond to it properly.James Lewis QC will represent the U.S. authorities.

Fitzgerald said he had not seen Assange face-to-face for six months, partly due to the pandemic, according to the BBC.However, a bid to rule out the new charges was unsuccessful, with Baraitser ruling they must be heard.

Assange, whose health has deteriorated while being held in a U.K. prison, is wanted on 18 charges, 17 of which fall under the U.S. Espionage Act.

The U.S. will specifically accuse him of conspiring with army intelligence analyst Chelsea Manning to decipher a password known as "hash" in order to access a classified U.S. Department of Defense computer and expose military secrets.

Speaking from a glass box on Monday, Assange said he does not consent to extradition.

If the 49-year-old Australian is extradited to the U.S., he could face a prison sentence of 175 years. His mother Christine Assange said on Twitter that he won't survive if he is extradited.

Assange's supporters argue that the U.S. is targeting him for political reasons after his journalism exposed alleged war crimes and human rights abuses.

The hearing is due to last four weeks. Dozens of witnesses are expected to be called to give evidence and a final verdict will be delivered at a later date.

There are a limited number of seats available in the court due to social distancing measures that have been introduced in response to the pandemic.

Assange supporters, including father John Shipton and fashion designer Dame Vivienne Westwood, gathered outside the historic criminal court Monday to protest his extradition.

"Julian is a publisher and a journalist," Shipton said outside the court on Monday. "It's an oppression of journalism and free press everywhere in the Western world. It can't go on, it has to stop now."

Michelle Stanistreet, general secretary for the National Union of Journalists in the U.K. and Ireland, said in a statement: "If this extradition is allowed, it will send a clear signal that journalists and publishers are at risk whenever their work discomforts the United States government. Media freedom the world over will take a significant backward step if Assange is forced to face these charges at the behest of a U.S. president."

She continued: "The U.K. government makes much of its commitment to free expression this case is its opportunity to demonstrate the substance behind those warm words."

Assange, a father of two young children, was arrested at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London in April 2019 for breaching his bail conditions and has been held at the high-security Belmarsh Prison in southeast London since.

Assange's partner, Stella Moris, is one of those expected to appear in court. The South African-born lawyer told PA Media that her partner has lost a lot of weight in prison and that his health is deteriorating.

"This is an attack on journalism," she said. "If he is extradited to the U.S. for publishing inconvenient truths about the wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, then it will set a precedent, and any British journalist or publisher could also be extradited in the future."

Moris launched a crowdfunding campaign last month to pay for Assange's legal fees. Over 100,000 ($131,000) has been pledged.

Read more:

WikiLeaks Julian Assange fights extradition to the U.S. in top London court - CNBC

Judge threatens to remove Assange on 2nd day of extradition hearing – UPI News

Sept. 8 (UPI) -- A British judge on Tuesday threatened to remove WikiLeaks co-founder Julian Assange from the courtroom during an extradition hearing after he interjected while a witness was being questioned.

The interruption occurred on the second day of the hearing while Clive Stafford-Smith, the founder of the legal nonprofit Reprieve, was being questioned by British attorney James Lewis on behalf of the United States government.

When Judge Vanessa Baraitser called for a 10-minute recess after an intense exchange between Lewis and Stafford-Smith, Assange said "this is nonsense."

Baraitser quickly moved to caution Assange, who is fighting extradition to the United States to face hacking charges related to documents leaked by former intelligence specialist Chelsea Manning.

"I understand you'll hear things you disagree with and you'd like to contradict and speak about these things yourself, but this is not your opportunity to do so," she told Assange. "If you interrupt proceedings it is open to me to proceed in your absence. This is obviously something I would not wish to do."

Tuesday was the second day of what's expected to be a four-week hearing in London involving U.S. efforts to extradite Assange.

Stafford-Smith, who holds U.S. and British citizenship, told the court the classified documents from Manning that were later released by WikiLeaks uncovered war crimes and human rights abuses by the United States.

He argued that by "over-classifying" the material and taking other actions in the international community, the U.S. government has damaged its reputation over the past 20 years.

"It has harmed us more than anything else," he said.

Link:

Judge threatens to remove Assange on 2nd day of extradition hearing - UPI News

The US is Determined to Make Julian Assange Pay for Exposing the Cruelty of Its War on Iraq – CounterPunch

Drawing by Nathaniel St. Clair

OnSeptember 7, 2020, Julian Assange will leave his cell in Belmarsh Prison in London and attend a hearing that will determine his fate. After a long period of isolation, he was finally able to meet his partnerStella Morisand see their two sonsGabriel (age three) and Max (age one)on August 25. After the visit, Morissaidthat he looked to be in a lot of pain.

The hearing that Assange will face has nothing to do with the reasons for his arrest from the embassy of Ecuador in London on April 11, 2019. He was arrested that day for hisfailureto surrender in 2012 to the British authorities, who would have extradited him to Sweden; in Sweden, at that time, there were accusations of sexual offenses against Assange that weredroppedin November 2019. Indeed, after the Swedish authorities decided not to pursue Assange, he should have been released by the UK government. But he was not.

The true reason for the arrest was never the charge in Sweden; it was the desire of the U.S. government to have him brought to the United States on a range of charges. On April 11, 2019, the UK Home Office spokespersonsaid, We can confirm that Julian Assange was arrested in relation to a provisional extradition request from the United States of America. He is accused in the United States of America of computer-related offenses.

Manning

The day after Assanges arrest, the campaign group Article 19 published astatementthat said that while the UK authorities had originally said they wanted to arrest Assange for fleeing bail in 2012 toward the Swedish extradition request, it had now become clear that the arrest was due to a U.S. Justice Departmentclaimon him. The U.S. wanted Assange on a federal charge of conspiracy to commit computer intrusion for agreeing to break a password to a classified U.S. government computer. Assange was accused of helping whistleblowerChelsea Manningin 2010 when Manning passed WikiLeaksled by Assangean explosive trove of classified information from the U.S. government that contained clear evidence of war crimes. Manning spent seven years in prison before her sentence wascommutedby former U.S. President Barack Obama.

While Assange was in the Ecuadorian embassy and now as he languishes in Belmarsh Prison, the U.S. government has attempted to create an air-tight case against him. The U.S. Justice DepartmentindictedAssange on at least 18 charges, including the publication of classified documents and a charge that he helped Manning crack a password and hack into a computer at the Pentagon. One of theindictmentsfrom 2018makes the case against Assange clearly.

The charge that Assange published the documents is not the central one, since the documents were also published by a range of media outlets such as the New York Times and the Guardian. The keychargeis that Assange actively encouraged Manning to provide more information and agreed to crack a password hash stored on U.S. Department of Defense computers connected to the Secret Internet Protocol Network (SIPRNet), a United States government network used for classified documents and communications. Assange is also charged with conspiracy to commit computer intrusion for agreeing to crack that password hash. The problem here is that it appears that the U.S. government has no evidence that Assange colluded with Manning to break into the U.S. system.

Manning does not deny that she broke into the system, downloaded the materials, and sent them to WikiLeaks. Once she had done this, WikiLeaks, like the other media outlets, published the materials. Manning had a very trying seven years in prison for her role in the transmission of the materials. Because of the lack of evidence against Assange, Manning was asked to testify against him before a grand jury. She refused and now is once more inprison; the U.S. authorities are using her imprisonment as a way to compel her to testify against Assange.

What Manning Sent to Assange

On January 8, 2010, WikiLeaksannouncedthat it had encrypted videos of U.S. bomb strikes on civilians. The video, later released as Collateral Murder, showed in cold-blooded detail how on July 12, 2007, U.S. AH-64 Apache helicopters fired 30-millimeter guns at a group of Iraqis in New Baghdad; among those killed were Reuters photographer Namir Noor-Eldeen and his driver Saeed Chmagh. Reuters immediately asked for information about the killing; they were fed the official story and told that there was no video, but Reuters futilelypersisted.

In 2009, Washington Post reporter David Finkel publishedThe Good Soldiers, based on his time embedded with the 2-16 battalion of the U.S. military. Finkel was with the U.S. soldiers in the Al-Amin neighborhood when they heard the Apache helicopters firing. For his book, Finkel had watched the tape (this is evident frompages 96 to 104); he defends the U.S. military, saying that the Apache crew had followed the rules of engagement and that everyone had acted appropriately. The soldiers, he wrote, were good soldiers, and the time had come for dinner. Finkel had made it clear that a video existed, even though the U.S. government denied its existence to Reuters.

Thevideois horrifying. It shows the callousness of the pilots. The people on the ground were not shooting at anyone. The pilots fire indiscriminately. Look at those dead bastards, one of them says, while another says, Nice, after they fire at the civilians. A van pulls up at the carnage, and a person gets out to help the injuredincluding Saeed Chmagh. The pilots request permission to fire at the van, get permission rapidly, and shoot at the van. Army Specialist Ethan McCordpart of the 2-16 battalion that had Finkel embedded with themsurveyed the scene from the ground minutes later. In 2010, McCordtoldWireds Kim Zetter what he saw: I have never seen anybody being shot by a 30-millimeter round before. It didnt seem real, in the sense that it didnt look like human beings. They were destroyed.

In the van, McCord and other soldiers found badly injured Sajad Mutashar (age 10) and Doaha Mutashar (age five); their father, Salehwho had tried to rescue Saeed Chmaghwas dead on the ground. In the video, the pilot saw that there were children in the van; Well, its their fault for bringing their kids into a battle, he says callously.

Robert Gibbs, the press secretary for President Barack Obama,saidin April 2010 that the events on the video were extremely tragic. But the cat was out of the bag. This video showed the world the actual character of the U.S. war on Iraq, which the United Nations Secretary-General Kofi Annan hadcalledillegal. The release of the video by Assange and WikiLeaks embarrassed the United States government. All its claims of humanitarian warfare had no credibility.

The campaign to destroy Assange begins at that point. The United States government has made it clear that it wants to try Assange for everything up totreason. People who reveal the dark side of U.S. power, such as Assange andEdward Snowden, are given no quarter. There is a long list of peoplesuch as Manning,Jeffrey Sterling,James Hitselberger,John Kiriakou, andReality Winnerwho, if they lived in countries being targeted by the United States, would be called dissidents. Manning is a hero for exposing war crimes; Assange, who merely assisted her, is being persecuted in plain daylight.

On January 28, 2007, a few months before he was killed by the U.S. military, Namir Noor-Eldeen took aphotographin Baghdad of a young boy with a soccer ball under his arm steps around a pool of blood. Beside the bright red blood lie a few rumpled schoolbooks. It was Noor-Eldeens humane eye that went for that photograph, with the boy walking around the danger as if it were nothing more than garbage on the sidewalk. This is what the U.S. illegal war had done to his country.

All these years later, that war remains alive and well in a courtroom in London; there Julian Assangewho revealed the truth of the killingwill struggle against being one more casualty of the U.S. war on Iraq.

This article was produced byGlobetrotter, a project of the Independent Media Institute.

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The US is Determined to Make Julian Assange Pay for Exposing the Cruelty of Its War on Iraq - CounterPunch