This is probably THE barometer of where things are going and yet I hardly have the energy to follow it.
After all, we are in the midst of the Sixth Great Extinction, financial meltdown and a viral pandemic
Consortium News Editor-in-Chief Joe Lauria sat down with former British MP George Galloway in London to discuss the first week of Julian Assange’s extradition hearing at Woolwich Crown Court.
After all, we are in the midst of the Sixth Great Extinction, financial meltdown and a viral pandemic
Your Man in the Public Gallery – Assange Hearing Day Four 225
28
February, 2020
Please
try this experiment for me.
Try
asking this question out loud, in a tone of intellectual interest and
engagement: “Are you suggesting that the two have the same
effect?”.
Now
try asking this question out loud, in a tone of hostility and
incredulity bordering on sarcasm: “Are you suggesting that the two
have the same effect?”.
Firstly,
congratulations on your acting skills; you take direction very well.
Secondly, is it not fascinating how precisely the same words can
convey the opposite meaning dependent on modulation of stress, pitch,
and volume?
Yesterday
the prosecution continued its argument that the provision in the 2007
UK/US Extradition Treaty that bars extradition for political offences
is a dead letter, and that Julian Assange’s objectives are not
political in any event. James Lewis QC for the prosecution spoke for
about an hour, and Edward Fitzgerald QC replied for the defence for
about the same time. During Lewis’s presentation, he was
interrupted by Judge Baraitser precisely once. During Fitzgerald’s
reply, Baraitser interjected seventeen times.
In
the transcript, those interruptions will not look unreasonable:
“Could
you clarify that for me Mr Fitzgerald…”
“So
how do you cope with Mr Lewis’s point that…”
“But
surely that’s a circular argument…”
“But
it’s not incorporated, is it?…”
All
these and the other dozen interruptions were designed to appear to
show the judge attempting to clarify the defence’s argument in a
spirit of intellectual testing. But if you heard the tone of
Baraitser’s voice, saw her body language and facial expressions, it
was anything but.
The
false picture a transcript might give is exacerbated by the courtly
Fitzgerald’s continually replying to each obvious harassment with
“Thank you Madam, that is very helpful”, which again if you were
there, plainly meant the opposite. But what a transcript will
helpfully nevertheless show was the bully pulpit of Baraitser’s
tactic in interrupting Fitzgerald again and again and again,
belittling his points and very deliberately indeed preventing him
from getting into the flow of his argument. The contrast in every way
with her treatment of Lewis could not be more pronounced.
So
now to report the legal arguments themselves.
James
Lewis for the prosecution, continuing his arguments from the day
before, said that Parliament had not included a bar on extradition
for political offences in the 2003 Act. It could therefore not be
reintroduced into law by a treaty. “To introduce a Political
Offences bar by the back door would be to subvert the intention of
Parliament.”
Lewis
also argued that these were not political offences. The definition of
a political offence was in the UK limited to behaviour intended “to
overturn or change a government or induce it to change its policy.”
Furthermore the aim must be to change government or policy in the
short term, not the indeterminate future.
Lewis
stated that further the term “political offence” could only be
applied to offences committed within the territory where it was
attempted to make the change. So to be classified as political
offences, Assange would have had to commit them within the territory
of the USA, but he did not.
If
Baraitser did decide the bar on political offences applied, the court
would have to determine the meaning of “political offence” in the
UK/US Extradition Treaty and construe the meaning of paragraphs 4.1
and 4.2 of the Treaty. To construe the terms of an international
treaty was beyond the powers of the court.
Lewis
perorated that the conduct of Julian Assange cannot possibly be
classified as a political offence. “It is impossible to place
Julian Assange in the position of a political refugee”. The
activity in which Wikileaks was engaged was not in its proper meaning
political opposition to the US Administration or an attempt to
overthrow that administration. Therefore the offence was not
political.
For
the defence Edward Fitzgerald replied that the 2003 Extradition Act
was an enabling act under which treaties could operate. Parliament
had been concerned to remove any threat of abuse of the political
offence bar to cover terrorist acts of violence against innocent
civilians. But there remained a clear protection, accepted worldwide,
for peaceful political dissent. This was reflected in the Extradition
Treaty on the basis of which the court was acting.
Baraitser
interrupted that the UK/US Extradition Treaty was not incorporated
into English Law.
Fitzgerald
replied that the entire extradition request is on the basis of the
treaty. It is an abuse of process for the authorities to rely on the
treaty for the application but then to claim that its provisions do
not apply.
“On
the face of it, it is a very bizarre argument that a treaty which
gives rise to the extradition, on which the extradition is founded,
can be disregarded in its provisions. It is on the face of it
absurd.” Edward Fitzgerald QC for the Defence
Fitzgerald
added that English Courts construe treaties all the time. He gave
examples.
Fitzgerald
went on that the defence did not accept that treason, espionage and
sedition were not regarded as political offences in England. But even
if one did accept Lewis’s too narrow definition of political
offence, Assange’s behaviour still met the test. What on earth
could be the motive of publishing evidence of government war crimes
and corruption, other than to change the policy of the government?
Indeed, the evidence would prove that Wikileaks had effectively
changed the policy of the US government, particularly on Iraq.
Baraitser
interjected that to expose government wrongdoing was not the same
thing as to try to change government policy. Fitzgerald asked her,
finally in some exasperation after umpteen interruptions, what other
point could there be in exposing government wrongdoing other than to
induce a change in government policy?
That
concluded opening arguments for the prosecution and defence.
MY
PERSONAL COMMENTARY
Let
me put this as neutrally as possible. If you could fairly state that
Lewis’s argument was much more logical, rational and intuitive than
Fitzgerald’s, you could understand why Lewis did not need an
interruption while Fitzgerald had to be continually interrupted for
“clarification”. But in fact it was Lewis who was making out the
case that the provisions of the very treaty under which the
extradition is being made, do not in fact apply, a logical step which
I suggest the man on the Clapham omnibus might reason to need rather
more testing than Fitzgerald’s assertion to the contrary.
Baraitser’s comparative harassment of Fitzgerald when he had the
prosecution on the ropes was straight out of the Stalin show trial
playbook.
The
defence did not mention it, and I do not know if it features in their
written arguments, but I thought Lewis’s point that these could not
be political offences, because Julian Assange was not in the USA when
he committed them, was breathtakingly dishonest. The USA claims
universal jurisdiction. Assange is being charged with crimes of
publishing committed while he was outside the USA. The USA claims the
right to charge anyone of any nationality, anywhere in the world, who
harms US interests. They also in addition here claim that as the
materials could be seen on the internet in the USA, there was an
offence in the USA. At the same time to claim this could not be a
political offence as the crime was committed outside the USA is, as
Edward Fitzgerald might say, on the face of it absurd. Which
curiously Baraitser did not pick up on.
Lewis’s
argument that the Treaty does not have any standing in English law is
not something he just made up. Nigel Farage did not materialise from
nowhere. There is in truth a long tradition in English law that even
a treaty signed and ratified with some bloody Johnny Foreigner
country, can in no way bind an English court. Lewis could and did
spout reams and reams of judgements from old beetroot faced judges
holding forth to say exactly that in the House of Lords, before going
off to shoot grouse and spank the footman’s son. Lewis was
especially fond of the Tin Council case.
There
is of course a contrary and more enlightened tradition, and a number
of judgements that say the exact opposite, mostly more recent. This
is why there was so much repetitive argument as each side piled up
more and more volumes of “authorities” on their side of the case.
The
difficulty for Lewis – and for Baraitser – is that this case is
not analogous to me buying a Mars bar and then going to court because
an International Treaty on Mars Bars says mine is too small.
Rather
the 2003 Extradition Act is an Enabling Act on which extradition
treaties then depend. You can’t thus extradite under the 2003 Act
without the Treaty. So the Extradition Treaty of 2007 in a very real
sense becomes an executive instrument legally required to authorise
the extradition. For the executing authorities to breach the terms of
the necessary executive instrument under which they are acting,
simply has to be an abuse of process. So the Extradition Treaty owing
to its type and its necessity for legal action, is in fact
incorporated in English Law by the Extradition Act of 2003 on which
it depends.
The
Extradition Treaty is a necessary precondition of the extradition,
whereas a Mars Bar Treaty is not a necessary precondition to buying
the Mars Bar.
That
is as plain as I can put it. I do hope that is comprehensible.
It
is of course difficult for Lewis that on the same day the Court of
Appeal was ruling against the construction of the Heathrow Third
Runway, partly because of its incompatibility with the Paris
Agreement of 2016, despite the latter not being fully incorporated
into English law by the Climate Change Act of 2008.
VITAL
PERSONAL EXPERIENCE
It
is intensely embarrassing for the Foreign and Commonwealth Office
(FCO) when an English court repudiates the application of a treaty
the UK has ratified with one or more foreign states. For that reason,
in the modern world, very serious procedures and precautions have
been put into place to make certain that this cannot happen.
Therefore the prosecution’s argument that all the provisions of the
UK/US Extradition Treaty of 2007 are not able to be implemented under
the Extradition Act of 2003, ought to be impossible.
I
need to explain I have myself negotiated and overseen the entry into
force of treaties within the FCO. The last one in which I personally
tied the ribbon and applied the sealing wax (literally) was the
Anglo-Belgian Continental Shelf Treaty of 1991, but I was involved in
negotiating others and the system I am going to describe was still in
place when I left the FCO as an Ambassador in 2005, and I believe is
unchanged today (and remember the Extradition Act was 2003 and the
US/UK Extradition Treaty ratified 2007, so my knowledge is not
outdated). Departmental nomenclatures change from time to time and so
does structural organisation. But the offices and functions I will
describe remain, even if names may be different.
All
international treaties have a two stage process. First they are
signed to show the government agrees to the treaty. Then, after a
delay, they are ratified. This second stage takes place when the
government has enabled the legislation and other required agency to
implement the treaty. This is the answer to Lewis’s observation
about the roles of the executive and legislature. The ratification
stage only takes place after any required legislative action. That is
the whole point.
This
is how it happens in the FCO. Officials negotiate the extradition
treaty. It is signed for the UK. The signed treaty then gets returned
to FCO Legal Advisers, Nationality and Treaty Department, Consular
Department, North American Department and others and is sent on to
Treasury/Cabinet Office Solicitors and to Home Office, Parliament and
to any other Government Department whose area is impacted by the
individual treaty.
The
Treaty is extensively vetted to check that it can be fully
implemented in all the jurisdictions of the UK. If it cannot, then
amendments to the law have to be made so that it can. These
amendments can be made by Act of Parliament or more generally by
secondary legislation using powers conferred on the Secretary of
State by an act. If there is already an Act of Parliament under which
the Treaty can be implemented, then no enabling legislation needs to
be passed. International Agreements are not all individually
incorporated into English or Scottish laws by specific new
legislation.
This
is a very careful step by step process, carried out by lawyers and
officials in the FCO, Treasury, Cabinet Office, Home Office,
Parliament and elsewhere. Each will in parallel look at every clause
of the Treaty and check that it can be applied. All changes needed to
give effect to the treaty then have to be made – amending
legislation, and necessary administrative steps. Only when all
hurdles have been cleared, including legislation, and Parliamentary
officials, Treasury, Cabinet Office, Home Office and FCO all certify
that the Treaty is capable of having effect in the UK, will the FCO
Legal Advisers give the go ahead for the Treaty to be ratified. You
absolutely cannot ratify the treaty before FCO Legal Advisers have
given this clearance.
This
is a serious process. That is why the US/UK Extradition Treaty was
signed in 2003 and ratified in 2007. That is not an abnormal delay.
So
I know for certain that ALL the relevant British Government legal
departments MUST have agreed that Article 4.1 of the UK/US
Extradition Treaty was capable of being given effect under the 2003
Extradition Act. That certification has to have happened or the
Treaty could never have been ratified.
It
follows of necessity that the UK Government, in seeking to argue now
that Article 4.1 is incompatible with the 2003 Act, is knowingly
lying. There could not be a more gross abuse of process.
I
have been keen for the hearing on this particular point to conclude
so that I could give you the benefit of my experience. I shall rest
there for now, but later today hope to post further on yesterday’s
row in court over releasing Julian from the anti-terrorist armoured
dock.
With
grateful thanks to those who donated or subscribed to make this
reporting possible. I wish to stress again that I absolutely do not
want anybody to give anything if it causes them the slightest
possibility of financial strain.
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.
ASSANGE EXTRADITION:CN Editor speaks to George Galloway
Consortium News Editor-in-Chief Joe Lauria sat down with former British MP George Galloway in London to discuss the first week of Julian Assange’s extradition hearing at Woolwich Crown Court.
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