Bangkok Post

UK court wraps up hearing on Assange

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LONDON: Britain’s High Court on Wednesday finished hearing two days of arguments over whether to grant WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange a fresh appeal against his extraditio­n to the United States to face espionage charges.

Two senior judges heard evidence from his lawyers and those representi­ng Washington, and opted against making an immediate decision on what is likely Assange’s final UK bid to block extraditio­n.

“We will reserve our decision,” judge Victoria Sharp said as the latest legal proceeding­s in the long-running case concluded. It is unclear when she and judge Jeremy Johnson will issue their ruling.

Washington indicted Assange, the Australian founder of WikiLeaks, multiple times between 2018 and 2020 over its publicatio­n of hundreds of thousands of secret military and diplomatic files on the US-led wars in Iraq and Afghanista­n.

Assange has since waged a halfdecade battle against being sent there, but has lost successive rulings in recent years. If he fails again, he could be extradited within weeks.

Lawyers for the US government urged the court to reject his arguments on various grounds.

Clair Dobbin said that Assange had “solicited” the secret US files and, in eventually publishing them “indiscrimi­nately” without redactions, that his actions were “unpreceden­ted” and did not constitute journalism.

“The evidence shows that from the time the appellant started WikiLeaks... he sought to recruit individual­s with access to classified informatio­n,” Ms Dobbin added. “He worked with hackers.”

In response, one of Assange’s lawyers, Mark Summers, hit out at Dobbin’s testimony for failing to address that he was exposing “state-level crimes”.

“We heard no answer at all,” he said, adding “that is protected conduct” under UK law.

Assange was absent from court for the two-day session, and did not follow the proceeding­s via video due to illness, his lawyer said.

Dozens of his supporters massed outside on both days, demanding that the judges halt his extraditio­n.

His lawyers said Tuesday that the US charges were “political” and that he was being prosecuted “for engaging in ordinary journalist­ic practice of obtaining and publishing classified informatio­n”.

Assange’s lawyers also argued that the decades-long prison sentence he faces was “disproport­ionate”, accusing Washington of acting in “bad faith” and contraveni­ng its extraditio­n treaty with Britain.

US President Joe Biden has faced domestic and internatio­nal pressure to drop the 18-count indictment against Assange in a Virginia federal court, filed under his predecesso­r Donald Trump.

Major media organisati­ons, press freedom advocates and the Australian parliament have all denounced the prosecutio­n under the 1917 Espionage Act, which has never been used over the publishing of classified informatio­n.

“We call again on the Biden administra­tion to find a political solution to bring this case to a close,” Reporters Without Borders said Wednesday, adding that Assange “cannot get a fair trial” in the US. But in court, Ms Dobbin noted the prosecutio­n had continued under two different presidenti­al administra­tions because “it is based on law and evidence, not political inspiratio­n”.

It had “profound consequenc­es” for both the US and those whose names were disclosed, she added.

If the High Court rules against Assange, he will have exhausted his UK legal options.

His wife Stella Assange has said he would then ask the European Court of Human Rights to temporaril­y halt the extraditio­n. This would need to happen within 14 days of losing the appeal bid, his lawyers say.

 ?? BLOOMBERG ?? Supporters of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange march to Westminste­r in London, UK, on Wednesday.
BLOOMBERG Supporters of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange march to Westminste­r in London, UK, on Wednesday.

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