UK
inexplicably bars
WikiLeaks editor from
extradition hearing day after
Assange handcuffed 11 times
& STRIPPED twice
RT,
25 February, 2020
Wikileaks editor Kristin Hrafnsson was temporarily barred from the extradition hearing for publisher Julian Assange, who was reportedly handcuffed 11 times, stripped twice, and robbed of his legal papers after the first court day.
Hrafnsson was pulled out of the crowd as he attempted to enter the public gallery of Woolwich Crown Court on Tuesday morning, he told RT, after someone shouted “Where is the WikiLeaks editor?”
Explaining that he was given “no grounds” for the order and was unable to locate the head of the court to get an answer, he recorded and released a statement denouncing his exclusion from the supposedly-public proceedings as “outrageous” and calling on the public to “demand some answers — because I’m not getting any.”
@wikileaks Editor @khrafnsson Kristinn Hrafnsson was picked out and demanded he leave the court with no reason given. He has now been let back in after intervention from solicitors. Here is his statement when he was expelled. #AssangeCase #Assange #DontExtraditeAssange
Assange’s father John Shipton also walked out in solidarity, while the publisher’s lawyer Gareth Pierce worked to get Hrafnsson permission to enter. He was finally approached and told “a misunderstanding had occurred,” given a verbal apology and allowed to enter the public gallery, but his exclusion was never explained. Hrafnsson has demanded an explanation in writing and a formal apology. The WikiLeaks editor was equally disgusted by the treatment of Assange himself, who was — according to his lawyer — handcuffed 11 times, stripped twice, and deprived of his legal papers following the conclusion of the first day of hearings. “How can anybody prepare for a trial when he is treated in this manner?” Hrafnsson asked, calling the UK’s handling of its high-profile prisoner “highly abusive.”
This is not a thing you should expect in a civilized country where human rights concerns are highlighted.
Hrafnsson is not optimistic about Assange’s future, noting that the “English court is being misled by Americans who are trying to abuse the process of extradition by mere fabrications.” The cramped quarters — just 12 or 13 seats in the public gallery, while the legions of protesters are kept outside the court compound “for no apparent reason” — are “totally inadequate for a trial of this importance,” he said, observing that despite London’s claims, the hearing is “not being held in public.”
Assange is facing extradition to the US, where he could be sentenced to 175 years in prison on a bundle of espionage and hacking charges stemming from the 2010 release by WikiLeaks of classified Department of Defense files that have come to be known as the Afghan and Iraq War Logs. The US has continued to argue that the disclosures put political dissidents and journalists in danger, but no names of “victims” or other proof have been supplied to back up that assertion.
https://www.rt.com/news/481671-us-assange-kidnap-poison/
CRAIG
MURRAY: Your Man
In The Public Gallery –
Assange Hearing Day 1
By
Craig Murray
https://www.fort-russ.com/2020/02/craig-murray-your-man-in-the-public-gallery-assange-hearing-day-1/
February
25th
Woolwich
Crown Court is designed to impose the power of the state. Normal
courts in this country are public buildings, deliberately placed by
our ancestors right in the centre of towns, almost always just up a
few steps from a main street. The major purpose of their positioning
and of their architecture was to facilitate public access in the
belief that it is vital that justice can be seen by the public.
Woolwich
Crown Court, which hosts Belmarsh Magistrates Court, is built on
totally the opposite principle. It is designed with no other purpose
than to exclude the public. Attached to a prison on a windswept marsh
far from any normal social centre, an island accessible only through
navigating a maze of dual carriageways, the entire location and
architecture of the building is predicated on preventing public
access. It is surrounded by a continuation of the same extremely
heavy duty steel paling barrier that surrounds the prison. It is the
most extraordinary thing, a courthouse which is a part of the prison
system itself, a place where you are already considered guilty and in
jail on arrival. Woolwich Crown Court is nothing but the physical
negation of the presumption of innocence, the very incarnation of
injustice in unyielding steel, concrete and armoured glass. It has
precisely the same relationship to the administration of justice as
Guantanamo Bay or the Lubyanka. It is in truth just the sentencing
wing of Belmarsh prison.
When
enquiring about facilities for the public to attend the hearing, an
Assange activist was told by a member of court staff that we should
realise that Woolwich is a “counter-terrorism court”. That is
true de facto, but in truth a “counter-terrorism court” is an
institution unknown to the UK constitution. Indeed, if a single day
at Woolwich Crown Court does not convince you the existence of
liberal democracy is now a lie, then your mind must be very closed
indeed.
Extradition
hearings are not held at Belmarsh Magistrates Court inside Woolwich
Crown Court. They are always held at Westminster Magistrates Court as
the application is deemed to be delivered to the government at
Westminster. Now get your head around this. This hearing is at
Westminster Magistrates Court. It is being held by the Westminster
magistrates and Westminster court staff, but located at Belmarsh
Magistrates Court inside Woolwich Crown Court. All of which weird
convolution is precisely so they can use the “counter-terrorist
court” to limit public access and to impose the fear of the power
of the state.
One
consequence is that, in the courtroom itself, Julian Assange is
confined at the back of the court behind a bulletproof glass screen.
He made the point several times during proceedings that this makes it
very difficult for him to see and hear the proceedings. The
magistrate, Vanessa Baraitser, chose to interpret this with studied
dishonesty as a problem caused by the very faint noise of
demonstrators outside, as opposed to a problem caused by Assange
being locked away from the court in a massive bulletproof glass box.
Now
there is no reason at all for Assange to be in that box, designed to
restrain extremely physically violent terrorists. He could sit, as a
defendant at a hearing normally would, in the body of the court with
his lawyers. But the cowardly and vicious Baraitser has refused
repeated and persistent requests from the defence for Assange to be
allowed to sit with his lawyers. Baraitser of course is but a puppet,
being supervised by Chief Magistrate Lady Arbuthnot, a woman so
enmeshed in the defence and security service establishment I can
conceive of no way in which her involvement in this case could be
more corrupt.
It
does not matter to Baraitser or Arbuthnot if there is any genuine
need for Assange to be incarcerated in a bulletproof box, or whether
it stops him from following proceedings in court. Baraitser’s
intention is to humiliate Assange, and to instill in the rest of us
horror at the vast crushing power of the state. The inexorable
strength of the sentencing wing of the nightmarish Belmarsh Prison
must be maintained. If you are here, you are guilty.
It’s
the Lubyanka. You may only be a remand prisoner. This may only be a
hearing not a trial. You may have no history of violence and not be
accused of any violence. You may have three of the country’s most
eminent psychiatrists submitting reports of your history of severe
clinical depression and warning of suicide. But I, Vanessa Baraitser,
am still going to lock you up in a box designed for the most violent
of terrorists. To show what we can do to dissidents. And if you can’t
then follow court proceedings, all the better.
You
will perhaps better accept what I say about the Court when I tell you
that, for a hearing being followed all round the world, they have
brought it to a courtroom which had a total number of sixteen seats
available to members of the public. 16. To make sure I got one of
those 16 and could be your man in the gallery, I was outside that
great locked iron fence queuing in the cold, wet and wind from 6am.
At 8am the gate was unlocked, and I was able to walk inside the fence
to another queue before the doors of the courtroom, where despite the
fact notices clearly state the court opens to the public at 8am, I
had to queue outside the building again for another hour and forty
minutes. Then I was processed through armoured airlock doors, through
airport type security, and had to queue behind two further locked
doors, before finally getting to my seat just as the court started at
10am. By which stage the intention was we should have been thoroughly
cowed and intimidated, not to mention drenched and potentially
hypothermic.
There
was a separate media entrance and a media room with live transmission
from the courtroom, and there were so many scores of media I thought
I could relax and not worry as the basic facts would be widely
reported. In fact, I could not have been more wrong. I followed the
arguments very clearly every minute of the day, and not a single one
of the most important facts and arguments today has been reported
anywhere in the mainstream media. That is a bold claim, but I fear it
is perfectly true. So I have much work to do to let the world know
what actually happened. The mere act of being an honest witness is
suddenly extremely important, when the entire media has abandoned
that role.
James
Lewis QC made the opening statement for the prosecution. It consisted
of two parts, both equally extraordinary. The first and longest part
was truly remarkable for containing no legal argument, and for being
addressed not to the magistrate but to the media. It is not just that
it was obvious that is where his remarks were aimed, he actually
stated on two occasions during his opening statement that he was
addressing the media, once repeating a sentence and saying
specifically that he was repeating it again because it was important
that the media got it.
I
am frankly astonished that Baraitser allowed this. It is completely
out of order for a counsel to address remarks not to the court but to
the media, and there simply could not be any clearer evidence that
this is a political show trial and that Baraitser is complicit in
that. I have not the slightest doubt that the defence would have been
pulled up extremely quickly had they started addressing remarks to
the media. Baraitser makes zero pretence of being anything other than
in thrall to the Crown, and by extension to the US Government.
The
points which Lewis wished the media to know were these: it is not
true that mainstream outlets like the Guardian and New York Times are
also threatened by the charges against Assange, because Assange was
not charged with publishing the cables but only with publishing the
names of informants, and with cultivating Manning and assisting him
to attempt computer hacking. Only Assange had done these things, not
mainstream outlets.
Lewis
then proceeded to read out a series of articles from the mainstream
media attacking Assange, as evidence that the media and Assange were
not in the same boat. The entire opening hour consisted of the
prosecution addressing the media, attempting to drive a clear wedge
between the media and Wikileaks and thus aimed at reducing media
support for Assange. It was a political address, not remotely a legal
submission. At the same time, the prosecution had prepared reams of
copies of this section of Lewis’ address, which were handed out to
the media and given them electronically so they could cut and paste.
Following
an adjournment, magistrate Baraitser questioned the prosecution on
the veracity of some of these claims. In particular, the claim that
newspapers were not in the same position because Assange was charged
not with publication, but with “aiding and abetting” Chelsea
Manning in getting the material, did not seem consistent with Lewis’
reading of the 1989 Official Secrets Act, which said that merely
obtaining and publishing any government secret was an offence.
Surely, Baraitser suggested, that meant that newspapers just
publishing the Manning leaks would be guilty of an offence?
This
appeared to catch Lewis entirely off guard. The last thing he had
expected was any perspicacity from Baraitser, whose job was just to
do what he said. Lewis hummed and hawed, put his glasses on and off
several times, adjusted his microphone repeatedly and picked up a
succession of pieces of paper from his brief, each of which appeared
to surprise him by its contents, as he waved them haplessly in the
air and said he really should have cited the Shayler case but
couldn’t find it. It was liking watching Columbo with none of the
charm and without the killer question at the end of the process.
Suddenly
Lewis appeared to come to a decision. Yes, he said much more firmly.
The 1989 Official Secrets Act had been introduced by the Thatcher
Government after the Ponting Case, specifically to remove the public
interest defence and to make unauthorised possession of an official
secret a crime of strict liability – meaning no matter how you got
it, publishing and even possessing made you guilty. Therefore, under
the principle of dual criminality, Assange was liable for extradition
whether or not he had aided and abetted Manning. Lewis then went on
to add that any journalist and any publication that printed the
official secret would therefore also be committing an offence, no
matter how they had obtained it, and no matter if it did or did not
name informants.
Lewis
had thus just flat out contradicted his entire opening statement to
the media stating that they need not worry as the Assange charges
could never be applied to them. And he did so straight after the
adjournment, immediately after his team had handed out copies of the
argument he had now just completely contradicted. I cannot think it
has often happened in court that a senior lawyer has proven himself
so absolutely and so immediately to be an unmitigated and
ill-motivated liar. This was undoubtedly the most breathtaking moment
in today’s court hearing.
Yet
remarkably I cannot find any mention anywhere in the mainstream media
that this happened at all. What I can find, everywhere, is the
mainstream media reporting, via cut and paste, Lewis’s first part
of his statement on why the prosecution of Assange is not a threat to
press freedom; but nobody seems to have reported that he totally
abandoned his own argument five minutes later. Were the journalists
too stupid to understand the exchanges?
The
explanation is very simple. The clarification coming from a question
Baraitser asked Lewis, there is no printed or electronic record of
Lewis’ reply. His original statement was provided in cut and paste
format to the media. His contradiction of it would require a
journalist to listen to what was said in court, understand it and
write it down. There is no significant percentage of mainstream media
journalists who command that elementary ability nowadays.
“Journalism” consists of cut and paste of approved sources only.
Lewis could have stabbed Assange to death in the courtroom, and it
would not be reported unless contained in a government press release.
I
was left uncertain of Baraitser’s purpose in this. Plainly she
discomfited Lewis very badly on this point, and appeared rather to
enjoy doing so. On the other hand the point she made is not
necessarily helpful to the defence. What she was saying was
essentially that Julian could be extradited under dual criminality,
from the UK point of view, just for publishing, whether or not he
conspired with Chelsea Manning, and that all the journalists who
published could be charged too. But surely this is a point so extreme
that it would be bound to be invalid under the Human Rights Act? Was
she pushing Lewis to articulate a position so extreme as to be
untenable – giving him enough rope to hang himself – or was she
slavering at the prospect of not just extraditing Assange, but of
mass prosecutions of journalists?
The
reaction of one group was very interesting. The four US government
lawyers seated immediately behind Lewis had the grace to look very
uncomfortable indeed as Lewis baldly declared that any journalist and
any newspaper or broadcast media publishing or even possessing any
government secret was committing a serious offence. Their entire
strategy had been to pretend not to be saying that.
Lewis
then moved on to conclude the prosecution’s arguments. The court
had no decision to make, he stated. Assange must be extradited. The
offence met the test of dual criminality as it was an offence both in
the USA and UK. UK extradition law specifically barred the court from
testing whether there was any evidence to back up the charges. If
there had been, as the defence argued, abuse of process, the court
must still extradite and then the court must pursue the abuse of
process as a separate matter against the abusers. (This is a
particularly specious argument as it is not possible for the court to
take action against the US government due to sovereign immunity, as
Lewis well knows). Finally, Lewis stated that the Human Rights Act
and freedom of speech were completely irrelevant in extradition
proceedings.
Edward
Fitzgerald then arose to make the opening statement for the defence.
He started by stating that the motive for the prosecution was
entirely political, and that political offences were specifically
excluded under article 4.1 of the UK/US extradition treaty. He
pointed out that at the time of the Chelsea Manning Trial and again
in 2013 the Obama administration had taken specific decisions not to
prosecute Assange for the Manning leaks. This had been reversed by
the Trump administration for reasons that were entirely political.
On
abuse of process, Fitzgerald referred to evidence presented to the
Spanish criminal courts that the CIA had commissioned a Spanish
security company to spy on Julian Assange in the Embassy, and that
this spying specifically included surveillance of Assange’s
privileged meetings with his lawyers to discuss extradition. For the
state trying to extradite to spy on the defendant’s client-lawyer
consultations is in itself grounds to dismiss the case. (This point
is undoubtedly true. Any decent judge would throw the case out
summarily for the outrageous spying on the defence lawyers).
Fitzgerald
went on to say the defence would produce evidence the CIA not only
spied on Assange and his lawyers, but actively considered kidnapping
or poisoning him, and that this showed there was no commitment to
proper rule of law in this case.
Fitzgerald
said that the prosecution’s framing of the case contained
deliberate misrepresentation of the facts that also amounted to abuse
of process. It was not true that there was any evidence of harm to
informants, and the US government had confirmed this in other fora,
eg in Chelsea Manning’s trial. There had been no conspiracy to hack
computers, and Chelsea Manning had been acquitted on that charge at
court martial. Lastly it was untrue that Wikileaks had initiated
publication of unredacted names of informants, as other media
organisations had been responsible for this first.
Again,
so far as I can see, while the US allegation of harm to informants is
widely reported, the defence’s total refutation on the facts and
claim that the fabrication of facts amounts to abuse of process is
not much reported at all. Fitzgerald finally referred to US prison
conditions, the impossibility of a fair trial in the US, and the fact
the Trump Administration has stated foreign nationals will not
receive First Amendment protections, as reasons that extradition must
be barred. You can read the whole defence statement, but in my view
the strongest passage was on why this is a political prosecution, and
thus precluded from extradition.
For
the purposes of section 81(a), I next have to deal with the question
of how
this
politically motivated prosecution satisfies the test of being
directed against
Julian
Assange because of his political opinions. The essence of his
political
opinions
which have provoked this prosecution are summarised in the reports
of
Professor Feldstein , Professor Rogers , Professor Noam
Chomsky
and Professor Kopelman:-
i.
He is a leading proponent of an open society and of freedom of
expression.
ii.
He is anti-war and anti-imperialism.
iii.
He is a world-renowned champion of political transparency and of the
public’s
right to access information on issues of importance – issues such
as
political corruption, war crimes, torture and the mistreatment of
Guantanamo
detainees.
5.4.Those
beliefs and those actions inevitably bring him into conflict with
powerful states
including the current US administration, for political reasons. Which explains
why he has been denounced as a terrorist and why President Trump has
in the past called for the death penalty.
5.5.But
I should add his revelations are far from confined to the wrongdoings
of
the
US. He has exposed surveillance by Russia; and published exposes of
Mr
Assad
in Syria; and it is said that WikiLeaks revelations about corruption
in
Tunisia
and torture in Egypt were the catalyst for the Arab Spring itself.
5.6.The
US say he is no journalist. But you will see a full record of his
work in
Bundle
M. He has been a member of the Australian journalists union since
2009,
he is a member of the NUJ and the European Federation of Journalists.
He
has won numerous media awards including being honoured with the
highest
award for Australian journalists. His work has been recognised by the
Economist,
Amnesty International and the Council of Europe. He is the winner
of
the Martha Gelhorn prize and has been repeatedly nominated for the
Nobel
Peace
Prize, including both last year and this year. You can see from the
materials
that he has written books, articles and documentaries. He has had
articles
published in the Guardian, the New York Times, the Washington Post
and
the New Statesman, just to name a few. Some of the very publications
for
which
his extradition is being sought have been refereed to and relied upon
in
Courts
throughout the world, including the UK Supreme Court and the
European
Court of Human Rights. In short, he has championed the cause of
transparency
and freedom of information throughout the world.
5.7.Professor
Noam Chomsky puts it like this: – ‘in courageously upholding
political
beliefs that most of profess to share he has performed an
enormous
service to all those in the world who treasure the values of
freedom
and democracy and who therefore demand the right to know
what
their elected representatives are doing’ [see tab 39, paragraph
14].
So
Julian Assange’s positive impact on the world is undeniable. The
hostility
it
has provoked from the Trump administration is equally undeniable.
The
legal test for ‘political opinions’
5.8.I
am sure you are aware of the legal authorities on this issue: namely
whether a
request is made because of the defendant’s political opinions. A
broad
approach
has to be adopted when applying the test. In support of this we rely
on
the case of Re Asliturk [2002] EWHC 2326 (abuse authorities, tab 11,
at
paras
25 – 26) which clearly establishes that such a wide approach should
be
adopted
to the concept of political opinions. And that will clearly cover
Julian
Assange’s
ideological positions. Moreover, we also rely on cases such as
Emilia
Gomez v SSHD [2000] INLR 549 at tab 43 of the political offence
authorities
bundle. These show that the concept of “political opinions”
extends
to
the political opinions imputed to the individual citizen by the state
which
prosecutes
him. For that reason the characterisation of Julian Assange and
WikiLeaks
as a “non-state hostile intelligence agency” by Mr Pompeo makes
clear
that he has been targeted for his imputed political opinions. All the
experts
whose reports you have show that Julian Assange has been targeted
because
of the political position imputed to him by the Trump administration
–
as
an enemy of America who must be brought down.
Tomorrow
the defence continue. I am genuinely uncertain what will happen as I
feel at the moment far too exhausted to be there at 6am to queue to
get in. But I hope somehow I will contrive another report tomorrow
evening.
With
grateful thanks to those who donated or subscribed to make this
reporting possible.
This
article is entirely free to reproduce and publish, including in
translation, and I very much hope people will do so actively. Truth
shall set us free.
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