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Julian Assange: US government wins High Court appeal for WikiLeaks founder’s extradition

Australian is wanted in States over publication of hundreds of thousands of leaked documents relating to Afghanistan and Iraq wars

Chiara Giordano
Friday 10 December 2021 10:21 GMT
November: Julian Assange and partner register intention to get married in prison

The US government has won its High Court bid to overturn a judge’s decision not to extradite Julian Assange on spying charges.

Assange, 50, is wanted in the US on allegations of a conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defence information following WikiLeaks’s publication of hundreds of thousands of leaked documents relating to the Afghanistan and Iraq wars.

US authorities brought a High Court challenge against a January ruling by then-district judge Vanessa Baraitser that Assange should not be sent to the US, in which she cited a real and “oppressive” risk of suicide.

After a two-day hearing in October, the Lord Chief Justice Lord Burnett, sitting with Lord Justice Holroyde, ruled in favour of the US on Friday.

The senior judges found that Judge Baraitser had based her decision on the risk of Assange being held in highly restrictive prison conditions if extradited.

But US authorities later gave assurances that Assange would not face those measures pre-trial or post-conviction unless he committed an act in the future that required them.

Lord Burnett said: “That risk is in our judgment excluded by the assurances which are offered. It follows that we are satisfied that, if the assurances had been before the judge, she would have answered the relevant question differently.”

He added: “That conclusion is sufficient to determine this appeal in the USA’s favour.”

The judges ordered the case must return to Westminster Magistrates Court for a district judge to formally send it to home secretary Priti Patel.

Assange’s fiancee Stella Moris, with whom he has two children, called the ruling “dangerous and misguided” and said they intended to appeal.

WikiLeaks editor-in-chief Kristinn Hrafnsson added in a statement: “Julian's life is once more under grave threat, and so is the right of journalists to publish material that governments and corporations find inconvenient.

“This is about the right of a free press to publish without being threatened by a bullying superpower.”

Stella Morris, partner of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, arrives at the Royal Courts of Justice (Henry Nicholls/Reuters)

The High Court was previously told blocking Assange’s removal due to his mental health risks would be “rewarding fugitives for their flight”.

James Lewis QC, for the US, said the district judge based her decision on Assange’s “intellectual ability to circumvent suicide preventative measures”, which risked becoming a “trump card” for anyone who wanted to oppose their extradition regardless of any resources the other state might have.

Mr Lewis said that the four “binding” diplomatic assurances made were a “solemn matter” and “are not dished out like smarties”.

These included that Assange would not be submitted to special administrative measures (SAMs) and detained at the ADX Florence Supermax jail if extradited and that the US would consent to Assange being transferred to Australia to serve any prison sentence he may be given.

The US authorities also argued Assange was well enough to be extradited, with Mr Lewis telling the court his mental illness “does not even come close” to being severe enough to prevent being sent overseas.

But lawyers representing Assange, who opposed the US’s bid to overturn the extradition block, had argued the assurances over the WikiLeaks founder’s potential treatment were “meaningless” and “vague”.

Edward Fitzgerald QC said the judge had produced a “carefully considered and fully reasoned judgment”, adding it was “clear” she had “scrupulously applied the test for oppression in cases of mental disorder”.

Mr Fitzgerald later said assurances not to impose SAMs on Assange or hold him at the ADX Florence Supermax jail pre-trial or post-conviction did not remove the risk of “conditions of administrative isolation”.

The court also heard Assange had faced a “menacing, threatening and frightening” situation while under surveillance when he lived at the Ecuadorian embassy in London.

Mr Fitzgerald argued in written submissions that claims of “extreme measures of surveillance”, alongside subsequent “recent disclosures about CIA plans from the same period in time to seriously harm Julian Assange”, justified earlier concerns for the safety and privacy of his partner Stella Moris.

Assange has been held in Belmarsh Prison since 2019 after he was carried out of the Ecuadorian embassy by police before being arrested for breaching his bail conditions.

He had entered the building in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden to face sex offence allegations, which he has always denied and were eventually dropped.

Additional reporting by Press Association

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