Frederic Neyrat on Fri, 31 May 2019 21:38:49 +0200 (CEST)


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Re: <nettime> Ben Quinn: Julian Assange shows psychological torture symptoms, says UN expert (Guardian)


Hi Nina,

I understand your point, but the Guardian's article says that:

 "Julian Assange is showing all the symptoms associated with prolonged exposure to psychological torture and should not be extradited to the US, according to a senior UN expert who visited him in prison.

Whatever Assange has done, he should not be tortured, correct? 

My best,

FN


On Fri, May 31, 2019 at 6:13 AM "Nina Temporär" <nina-temp@gmx.de> wrote:

"In the course of the past nine years, Mr Assange has been exposed to persistent, progressively severe abuse ranging ….. from deliberate collective ridicule, insults and humiliation...“
 
Seriously?

Little reminder:
"Part of the problem is that there is two women. If there was one, you could go:
'She is a bad woman'. I think this would have happened by now. 'This person is a
bad character, bad faith, and here is evidence that points to it.'  Because there is two,
it is much harder."
(Julian Assange in "Risk" by Laura Poitras, around min. 28)
 
 
*** Freedom for the whistleblowers - No to extradition - But for a more differentiated coverage of the topic ***
 
Gesendet: Freitag, 31. Mai 2019 um 12:24 Uhr
Von: "Patrice Riemens" <patrice@xs4all.nl>
An: nettime-l@kein.org
Betreff: <nettime> Ben Quinn: Julian Assange shows psychological torture symptoms, says UN expert (Guardian)
Original to:
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/may/31/julian-assange-shows-psychological-torture-symptoms-says-un-expert


Julian Assange shows psychological torture symptoms, says UN expert
UK government urged not to extradite WikiLeaks co-founder to US where he
faces decades in prison

Ben Quinn, The Guardian, Fri 31 May 2019.


Julian Assange is showing all the symptoms associated with prolonged
exposure to psychological torture and should not be extradited to the
US, according to a senior UN expert who visited him in prison.

Nils Melzer, UN’s special rapporteur on torture, is expected to make his
appeal to the UK government on Friday. It comes after Assange, the
co-founder of WikiLeaks, was said by his lawyers to be too ill to appear
by video link for the latest court hearing of the case on Thursday.

Assange has been moved to the health ward of Belmarsh prison, London,
where he has been serving a 50-week sentence for skipping bail while
fighting extradition to the US. He is accused of violating the Espionage
Act by publishing secret documents containing the names of confidential
US military and diplomatic sources.

After meeting Assange earlier this month in the company of medical
experts who examined him, Melzer will say on Friday that he fears the
Australian’s human rights could be seriously violated if he is
extradited to the US and will condemn what he describes as the
“deliberate and concerted abuse inflicted for years” on him.

Assange was arrested in April after Ecuador revoked his political asylum
and invited police inside the country’s Knightsbridge diplomatic
premises, where he had sought refuge in 2012 to avoid extradition to
Sweden over allegations of sexual assault, which he has denied.

“Physically there were ailments but that side of things are being
addressed by the prison health service and there was nothing urgent or
dangerous in that way,” Melzer said.

“What was worrying was the psychological side and his constant anxiety.
It was perceptible that he had a sense of being under threat from
everyone. He understood what my function was but it’s more that he was
extremely agitated and busy with his own thoughts. It was difficult to
have a very structured conversation with him.”

Melzer said that Belmarsh was an old prison and had issues about that
but he described it as well maintained, adding that characterisations of
it as a “supermax” or “the Guantanamo of Britain” were unhelpful. While
it does have a high-security wing Melzer said that Assange was not in
that section.

The lawyer, who receives 10 to 15 requests each day from sources asking
for him to get involved, said that his office had been approached by
Assange’s lawyers in December. But he said that he was initially
reluctant to do so, admitting he was affected by what he called the
“prejudice” around the case.

However, he began looking into the case again in March and, earlier this
week, wrote letters to the foreign ministers of the US, the UK and
Sweden.

“In the course of the past nine years, Mr Assange has been exposed to
persistent, progressively severe abuse ranging from systematic judicial
persecution and arbitrary confinement in the Ecuadorian embassy, to his
oppressive isolation, harassment and surveillance inside the embassy,
and from deliberate collective ridicule, insults and humiliation, to
open instigation of violence and even repeated calls for his
assassination,” Melzer will say on Friday.

He added the UK authorities had contacted his Geneva office to indicate
that the British government would be issuing a point-by-point rebuttal
of the assertions made in his letter.

Melzer, who is urging the UK government not to extradite Assange to the
US or to any other state failing to provide reliable guarantees against
his onward transfer to the US, criticised the way in which Assange’s
case was handled after police took him from the embassy.

“I was surprised, for example, to see that on the date he was arrested
he was immediately brought to court after six years in the embassy and
then convicted. Under the normal rule of law you would expect someone to
be arrested and then given a couple of weeks to prepare his defence at
least.”

The former legal adviser to the Red Cross will say on Friday: “In 20
years of work with victims of war, violence and political persecution I
have never seen a group of democratic states ganging up to deliberately
isolate, demonise and abuse a single individual for such a long time and
with so little regard for human dignity and the rule of law.”

Assange could face decades in a US prison after being charged with
violating the Espionage Act by publishing classified information through
WikiLeaks.

Prosecutors earlier this month announced 17 additional charges against
him for publishing hundreds of thousands of secret diplomatic cables and
files on the wars in Afghanistan and Iraq.

The 47-year-old was previously charged with working to hack a Pentagon
computer system, in a secret indictment that was unveiled soon after his
arrest at Ecuador’s embassy in London.

“He’s in fact far from well,” Assange’s lawyer, Gareth Peirce told the
hearing on Thursday at the Westminster magistrates court. The next
hearing on the extradition request was set for 12 June.

A UK government spokesperson said: “The UK has a close working
relationship with UN bodies and is committed to upholding the rule of
law. We support the important work of the special rapporteur’s mandate
and will respond to his letter in due course, but we disagree with a
number of his observations.

“Judges are impartial and independent from government, with any judgment
based solely on the facts of the case and the applicable law. The law
provides all those convicted with a right of appeal.”


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