A symbolic trial in London to defend Julian Assange and accuse the US

A symbolic trial in London to defend Julian Assange and accuse the US

The court intends to turn the situation around and put the US Government and its allies such as the United Kingdom on the dock, which, they alleged, are acting in alleged complicity in the open judicial process against the founder of the WikiLeaks leak site.

The initiative, promoted by the Progressive International, is inspired by the popular tribunal against the United States sponsored in 1966 by the French writer Jean Paul Sartre and the British philosopher Bertrand Russell, to judge Washington’s role in the Vietnam War.

From Moscow, the atonement responsible for one of the largest leaks of US classified documents in recent years, Edward Snowden, participated in the day – the first in person since last year of the symbolic court – with a defense of Assange, whom he described as “a staunch defender of the cause.”

“We are witnessing the murder … not only of a human being, but of the public interest,” Snowden denounced.

With him, the former Greek Finance Minister Yanis Varoufakis agreed, for whom they are trying to “slowly kill Julian and other leakers” less known for uncovering “crimes against humanity perpetrated by our leaders.”

The writer and intellectual Tariq Ali, the only one who was in that 1966 experience, opened the oral testimonies today at Church House, the historic Westminster building that housed the British Parliament during World War II and hosted the inaugural meeting of the Council. Security Council in the postwar period.

The Belmarsh court adopted the name of the maximum security prison in London where Assange has been held for two and a half years, while the Justice decides whether to extradite him to the United States, where he could face the maximum penalty on espionage charges.

In January, he won the first court battle against the extradition request issued by the Donald Trump government, although he was denied parole.

President Joe Biden went ahead with the appeal and the trial is set for next week.

The Progressive International website details that Renata Ávila, Apsana Begum, Richard Burgon, Jeremy Corbyn, Rafael Correa, Özlem Demirel, Deepa Govindarajan Driver, Daniel Ellsberg, Selay Ghaffar, Markéta Gregorová, Heike Hänsel, Srećko are part of the court. Horvat, Ken Loach, Annie Machon, Stefania Maurizi, John McDonnell, Yanis Varoufakis, Ben Wizner, and Eyal Weizman.

Labor MP John McDonnell considered that Assange’s “crime” “was telling the truth, exposing the atrocities of the war on terror and the brutality of capitalism” and warned that if his extradition is allowed, the “fundamental freedoms that we believed ensured they would be in danger. “

In turn, Snowden’s lawyer, Ben Wizner, warned about the “dangerous precedent” that the extradition of the former director of WikiLeaks would set in the rest of the world, according to the Sputnik news agency.

“The ethical basis for denying the handover of a journalist to any country that claims him for publishing data protected as state secrets would be lost,” he explained.

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