Is Julian Assange leaving the Ecuadorean embassy
The UN has just ruled that
Julian Assange is being held arbitrarily.That should mean that he is
released from his captivity in the Ecuadorian embassy,but no good
dead goes unpunished as we know.
Freeing
Julian Assange: The Last Chapter
By
John Pilger
February
04, 2016 "Information
Clearing House"
- Assange is now closer to justice and vindication, and perhaps
freedom, than at any time since he was arrested.
One
of the epic miscarriages of justice of our time is unravelling. The
United Nations Working Group on Arbitrary Detention - an
international tribunal that adjudicates and decides whether
governments comply with their human rights obligations - has
ruled that Julian Assange has been detained unlawfully by Britain and
Sweden.
After
five years of fighting to clear his name - having been smeared
relentlessly yet charged with no crime - Assange is closer to justice
and vindication, and perhaps freedom, than at any time since he was
arrested and held in London under a European Extradition Warrant,
itself now discredited by Parliament.
The
U.N. Working Group bases its judgements on the European Convention on
Human Rights and three other treaties that are binding on all its
signatories. Both Britain and Sweden participated in the 16-month
long U.N. investigation and submitted evidence and defended their
position before the tribunal. It would fly contemptuously in the face
of international law if they did not comply with the judgement and
allow Assange to leave the refuge granted him by the Ecuadorean
government in its London embassy.
Previous
celebrated cases ruled upon by the Working Group include: Aung Sang
Suu Kyi in Burma, imprisoned opposition leader Anwar Ibrahim in
Malaysia, detained Washington Post journalist Jason Rezaian in Iran,
for which both Britain and Sweden have given support to the tribunal.
The difference now is that Assange's persecution and confinement
endures in the heart of London.
The
Assange case has never been primarily about allegations of sexual
misconduct in Sweden - where the Stockholm Chief Prosecutor, Eva
Finne, dismissed the case, saying, "I don't believe there is any
reason to suspect that he has committed rape." Also, one of the
women involved accused the police of fabricating evidence and
"railroading" her, protested that she "did not want to
accuse JA of anything." And a second prosecutor mysteriously
re-opened the case after political intervention, then stalled it.
The
Assange case is rooted across the Atlantic in Pentagon-dominated
Washington, obsessed with pursuing and prosecuting whistleblowers,
especially Assange for having exposed, in WikiLeaks, U.S. capital
crimes in Afghanistan and Iraq: the wholesale killing of civilians
and a contempt for sovereignty and international law. None of this
truth-telling is illegal under the U.S. Constitution. As a
presidential candidate in 2008, Barack Obama, a professor of
constitutional law, lauded whistleblowers as "part of a healthy
democracy [and they] must be protected from reprisal."
Obama,
the betrayer, has since prosecuted more whistleblowers than all the
US presidents combined. The courageous Chelsea Manning is serving 35
years in prison, having been tortured during her long pre-trial
detention.
Telling us this truth alone earns Assange his freedom, whereas justice is his right.
The
prospect of a similar fate has hung over Assange like a Damocles
sword. According to documents released by Edward Snowden, Assange is
on a "Manhunt target list." Vice President Joe Biden has
called him a "cyber terrorist." In Alexandria, Virginia, a
secret grand jury has attempted to concoct a crime for which Assange
can be prosecuted in a court. Even though he is not an American, he
is currently being fitted up with an espionage law dredged up from a
century ago when it was used to silence conscientious objectors
during World War I; the Espionage Act has provisions of both life
imprisonment and the death penalty.
Assange's
ability to defend himself in this Kafkaesque world has been
handicapped by the U.S. declaring his case a state secret. A federal
court has blocked the release of all information about what is known
as the "national security" investigation of WikiLeaks.
The
supporting act in this charade has been played by the second Swedish
prosecutor, Marianne Ny. Until recently, Ny had refused to comply
with a routine European procedure that required her to travel to
London to question Assange and so advance the case that James Catlin,
one of Assange's barristers, called "a laughing stock ... it's
as if they make it up as they go along."
Indeed,
even before Assange had left Sweden for London in 2010, Ny made no
attempt to question him. In the years since, she has never properly
explained, even to her own judicial authorities, why she has not
completed the case she so enthusiastically re-ignited - just as she
has never explained why she has refused to give Assange a guarantee
that he will not be extradited on to the U.S. under a secret
arrangement agreed between Stockholm and Washington. In 2010, the
Independent in London revealed that the two governments had discussed
Assange's potential extradition.
Then
there is tiny, brave Ecuador.
One
of the reasons Ecuador granted Julian Assange political asylum was
that his own government, in Australia, had offered him none of the
help to which he had a legal right and so abandoned him. Australia's
collusion with the United States against its own citizen is evident
in leaked documents; no more faithful vassals has America than the
obeisant politicians of the Antipodes.
Four
years ago, in Sydney, I spent several hours with the Liberal Member
of the Federal Parliament, Malcolm Turnbull. We discussed the threats
to Assange and their wider implications for freedom of speech and
justice, and why Australia was obliged to stand by him. Turnbull is
now the Prime Minister of Australia and, as I write, is attending an
international conference on Syria hosted the Cameron government -
about 15 minutes cab ride from the room that Assange has occupied for
three and a half years in the small Ecuadorean embassy just along
from Harrod's. The Syria connection is relevant if unreported; it was
WikiLeaks that revealed that the United States had long planned to
overthrow the Assad government in Syria. Today, as he meets and
greets, Prime Minister Turnbull has an opportunity to contribute a
modicum of purpose and truth to the conference by speaking up for his
unjustly imprisoned compatriot, for whom he showed such concern when
we met. All he need do is quote the judgement of the U.N. Working
Group on Arbitrary Detention. Will he reclaim this shred of
Australia's reputation in the decent world?
What
is certain is that the decent world owes much to Julian Assange. He
told us how indecent power behaves in secret, how it lies and
manipulates and engages in great acts of violence, sustaining wars
that kill and maim and turn millions into the refugees now in the
news. Telling us this truth alone earns Assange his freedom, whereas
justice is his right.
JohnPilger.com -
the films and journalism of John Pilger
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