by
Chris Hedges
November 12,
2018
from
TruthDig Website
Spanish
version
Mr. Fish / Truthdig
Julian Assange's sanctuary in the Ecuadorian Embassy in
London has been transformed into a little shop of horrors.
He has been largely cut
off from communicating with the outside world for the last seven
months. His Ecuadorian citizenship, granted to him as an asylum
seeker, is in the process of being revoked.
His health is failing. He
is being denied medical care. His efforts for legal redress have
been crippled by the gag rules, including Ecuadorian orders that he
cannot make public his conditions inside the embassy in fighting
revocation of his Ecuadorian citizenship.
Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison has refused to
intercede on behalf of Assange, an Australian citizen, even though
the new government in Ecuador, led by Lenín Moreno - who
calls Assange an "inherited problem" and an impediment to better
relations with Washington - is making
the WikiLeaks founder's life in the
embassy unbearable.
Almost daily, the embassy
is imposing harsher conditions for Assange, including making him pay
his medical bills, imposing arcane rules about how he must care for
his cat and demanding that he perform a variety of demeaning
housekeeping chores.
The Ecuadorians, reluctant to expel Assange after granting him
political asylum and granting him citizenship, intend to make his
existence so unpleasant he will agree to leave the embassy to be
arrested by the British and extradited to the United States.
The former president of
Ecuador, Rafael Correa, whose government granted the
publisher political asylum, describes Assange's current living
conditions as "torture."
His mother, Christine Assange, said in a recent video appeal,
"Despite Julian being
a multi-award-winning journalist, much loved and respected for
courageously exposing serious, high-level crimes and corruption
in the public interest, he is right now alone, sick, in pain -
silenced in solitary confinement, cut off from all contact and
being tortured in the heart of London.
The modern-day cage
of political prisoners is no longer the Tower of London.
It's the Ecuadorian Embassy."
"Here are the facts," she went on.
"Julian has been
detained nearly eight years without charge. That's right.
Without charge. For the past six years, the U.K. government has
refused his request for access to basic health needs, fresh air,
exercise, sunshine for vitamin D and access to proper dental and
medical care.
As a result, his
health has seriously deteriorated.
His examining doctors
warned his detention conditions are life-threatening. A slow and
cruel assassination is taking place before our very eyes in the
embassy in London."
"In 2016, after an in-depth investigation, the United Nations
ruled that Julian's legal and human rights have been violated on
multiple occasions," she said.
"He'd been illegally
detained since 2010. And they ordered his immediate release,
safe passage and compensation. The U.K. government refused to
abide by the U.N.'s decision. The U.S. government has made
Julian's arrest a priority.
They want to get
around a U.S. journalist's protection under the First Amendment
by charging him with espionage. They will stop at nothing
to do it."
"As a result of the U.S. bearing down on Ecuador, his asylum is
now under immediate threat," she said.
"The U.S. pressure on
Ecuador's new president resulted in Julian being placed in a
strict and severe solitary confinement for the last seven
months, deprived of any contact with his family and friends.
Only his lawyers could see him. Two weeks ago, things became
substantially worse.
The former president
of Ecuador, Rafael Correa, who rightfully gave Julian political
asylum from U.S. threats against his life and liberty, publicly
warned when U.S. Vice President Mike Pence recently visited
Ecuador a deal was done to hand Julian over to the U.S.
He stated that
because of the political costs of expelling Julian from their
embassy was too high, the plan was to break him down mentally.
A new, impossible,
inhumane protocol was implemented at the embassy to torture him
to such a point that he would break and be forced to leave."
Assange was once feted
and courted by some of the largest media organizations in the world,
including The New York Times and The Guardian, for the
information he possessed.
But once his trove of
material documenting U.S. war crimes, much of it provided by
Chelsea (Bradley)
Manning, was published by these media outlets he was
pushed aside and demonized.
A leaked Pentagon
document prepared by the Cyber Counterintelligence Assessments
Branch dated March 8, 2008, exposed a black propaganda campaign to
discredit WikiLeaks and Assange.
The document said the
smear campaign should seek to destroy the "feeling of trust" that is
WikiLeaks' "center of gravity" and blacken Assange's reputation.
It largely has worked.
Assange is especially
vilified for publishing 70,000 hacked emails belonging to the
Democratic National Committee (DNC) and senior Democratic officials.
The Democrats and former FBI Director James Comey say the
emails were copied from the accounts of John Podesta,
Democratic candidate Hillary Clinton's campaign chairman, by
Russian government hackers.
Comey has said the
messages were probably delivered to WikiLeaks by an intermediary.
Assange has said the emails were not provided by "state actors."
The Democratic Party - seeking to blame its election defeat on
Russian "interference" rather than the grotesque income inequality,
the betrayal of the working class, the loss of civil liberties, the
deindustrialization and the corporate coup d'état that the party
helped orchestrate - attacks Assange as a traitor, although he is
not a U.S. citizen. Nor is he a spy.
He is not bound by any
law I am aware of to keep U.S. government secrets. He has not
committed a crime.
Now, stories in
newspapers that once published material from WikiLeaks focus on his
allegedly slovenly behavior - not evident during my visits with him
- and how he is, in the words of The Guardian, "an unwelcome guest"
in the embassy.
The vital issue of the
rights of a publisher and a free press is ignored in favor of snarky
character assassination.
Assange was granted asylum in the embassy in 2012 to avoid
extradition to Sweden to answer questions about sexual offense
allegations that were eventually dropped. Assange feared that once
he was in Swedish custody he would be extradited to the United
States.
The British government
has said that, although he is no longer wanted for questioning in
Sweden, Assange will be arrested and jailed for breaching his bail
conditions if he leaves the embassy.
WikiLeaks and Assange have done more to expose the dark machinations
and crimes of the American Empire than any other news organization.
Assange, in addition to
exposing atrocities and crimes committed by the United States
military in our endless wars and revealing the inner workings of the
Clinton campaign, made public the hacking tools used by the CIA and
the National Security Agency, their surveillance programs and their
interference in foreign elections, including in the French
elections.
He disclosed the
conspiracy against British Labour Party leader Jeremy Corbyn
by Labour members of Parliament.
And WikiLeaks worked
swiftly to save Edward Snowden, who exposed the wholesale
surveillance of the American public by the government, from
extradition to the United States by helping him flee from Hong Kong
to Moscow.
The Snowden leaks also
revealed, ominously, that Assange was on a U.S. "manhunt target
list."
What is happening to Assange should terrify the press. And yet his
plight is met with indifference and sneering contempt. Once he is
pushed out of the embassy, he will be put on trial in the United
States for what he published.
This will set a new and
dangerous legal precedent that the Trump administration and future
administrations will employ against other publishers, including
those who are part of the mob trying to lynch Assange. The silence
about the treatment of Assange is not only a betrayal of him but a
betrayal of the freedom of the press itself.
We will pay dearly for
this complicity.
Even if the Russians provided the Podesta emails to Assange, he
should have published them. I would have.
They exposed practices of
the Clinton political machine that she and the Democratic leadership
sought to hide. In the two decades I worked overseas as a foreign
correspondent I was routinely leaked stolen documents by
organizations and governments.
My only concern was
whether the documents were forged or genuine. If they were genuine,
I published them.
Those who leaked material
to me included,
-
the rebels of the
Farabundo Marti National Liberation Front (FMLN)
-
the Salvadoran
army, which once gave me blood-smeared FMLN documents found
after an ambush
-
the Sandinista
government of Nicaragua
-
the Israeli
intelligence service, the Mossad
-
the Federal
Bureau of Investigation
-
the Central
Intelligence Agency
-
the Kurdistan
Workers' Party (PKK) rebel group
-
the Palestine
Liberation Organization (PLO)
-
the French
intelligence service, Direction Générale de la Sécurité
Extérieure, or DGSE
-
the Serbian
government of Slobodan Milosovic, who was later tried as a
war criminal
We learned from the
emails published by WikiLeaks that the Clinton Foundation received
millions of dollars from Saudi Arabia and Qatar, two of the major
funders of Islamic State.
As secretary of state,
Hillary Clinton paid her donors
back by approving $80 billion in weapons sales to Saudi Arabia,
enabling the kingdom to carry out a devastating war in Yemen
that has triggered a humanitarian crisis, including widespread food
shortages and a cholera epidemic, and left close to 60,000 dead.
-
We learned
Clinton was paid $675,000 for speaking at Goldman Sachs, a
sum so massive it can only be described as a bribe.
-
We learned
Clinton told the financial elites in her lucrative talks
that she wanted "open trade and open borders" and believed
Wall Street executives were best-positioned to manage the
economy, a statement that directly contradicted her campaign
promises.
-
We learned the
Clinton campaign worked to influence the Republican
primaries to ensure that Donald Trump was the Republican
nominee.
-
We learned
Clinton obtained advance information on primary-debate
questions.
-
We learned,
because 1,700 of the 33,000 emails came from Hillary
Clinton, she was the primary architect of the war in Libya.
-
We learned she
believed that the overthrow of Moammar Gadhafi would burnish
her credentials as a presidential candidate. The war she
sought has left Libya in chaos, seen the rise to power of
radical jihadists in what is now a failed state, triggered a
massive exodus of migrants to Europe, seen Libyan weapon
stockpiles seized by rogue militias and Islamic radicals
throughout the region, and resulted in 40,000 dead.
Should this information
have remained hidden from the American public?
You can argue yes, but
you can't then call yourself a journalist.
"They are setting my
son up to give them an excuse to hand him over to the U.S.,
where he would face a show trial," Christine Assange warned.
"Over the past eight
years, he has had no proper legal process. It has been unfair at
every single turn with much perversion of justice. There is no
reason to consider that this would change in the future.
The U.S. WikiLeaks
grand jury, producing the extradition warrant, was held in
secret by four prosecutors but no defense and no judge. The
U.K.-U.S. extradition treaty allows for the U.K. to extradite
Julian to the U.S. without a proper basic case.
Once in the U.S., the
National Defense Authorization Act allows for indefinite
detention without trial. Julian could very well be held in
Guantanamo Bay and tortured, sentenced to 45 years in a
maximum-security prison, or face the death penalty.
My son is in critical
danger because of a brutal, political persecution by the bullies
in power whose crimes and corruption he had courageously exposed
when he was editor in chief of WikiLeaks."
Assange is on his own.
Each day is more difficult for him. This is by design. It is up to
us to protest.
We are his last hope, and
the last hope, I fear, for a free press.
"We need to make our
protest against this brutality deafening," his mother said.
"I call on all you
journalists to stand up now because he's your colleague and you
are next. I call on all you politicians who say you entered
politics to serve the people to stand up now.
I call on all you
activists who support human rights, refugees, the environment,
and are against war, to stand up now because WikiLeaks has
served the causes that you spoke for and Julian is now suffering
for it alongside of you.
I call on all
citizens who value freedom, democracy and a fair legal process
to put aside your political differences and unite, stand up now.
Most of us don't have
the courage of our whistleblowers or journalists like Julian
Assange who publish them, so that we may be informed and warned
about the abuses of power."
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