Medical doctors seriously concerned "Mr Assange
could die in prison"
Open letter to
the UK home secretary about the plight of the
WikiLeaks’ publisher in London’s Belmarsh
prison.
Open Letter From Sixty Doctors
November 24/25, 2019 "Information
Clearing House" -
We
write
this open letter,
as medical doctors, to express our serious
concerns about the physical and mental health of
Julian Assange. Our professional concerns follow
publication recently of the harrowing eyewitness
accounts of Craig Murray and John Pilger of the
case management hearing on Monday 21 October
2019 at Westminster Magistrates Court. The
hearing related to the upcoming February 2020
hearing of the request by the US government for
Mr Assange’s extradition to the US in relation
to his work as a publisher of information,
including information about alleged crimes of
the US government.
Our concerns were
further heightened by the publication on 1
November 2019 of a further report of Nils Melzer,
the United Nations Special Rapporteur on Torture
and Other Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment
or Punishment, in which he stated: ‘Unless the
UK urgently changes course and alleviates his
inhumane situation, Mr Assange’s continued
exposure to arbitrariness and abuse may soon end
up costing his life.’
Having entered the
Ecuadorian Embassy in London on 19 June 2012, Mr
Assange sought and was granted political asylum
by the Ecuadorian government. On 11 April 2019,
he was removed from the Embassy and arrested by
the Metropolitan Police. He was subsequently
detained in Belmarsh maximum security prison, in
what Mr Melzer described as ‘oppressive
conditions of isolation and surveillance.’
During the seven
years spent in the Embassy in confined living
conditions, Mr Assange was visited and examined
by a number of experts each of whom expressed
alarm at the state of his health and requested
that he be allowed access to a hospital. No such
access was permitted. Mr Assange was unable to
exercise his right to free and necessary expert
medical assessment and treatment throughout the
seven-year period.
A chronology, based
on information available to the public, of
relevant visits, events and reports from a
medical perspective follows:
-
On 31 July
2015, a dentist reported that Mr Assange’s
‘upper right first premolar (UR4) tooth had
fractured along with the filling that was in
it and the dental pulp of the tooth was
exposed’ and ‘that failure to treat this
promptly would lead to infection of the root
leading to a dental abscess and pain.’ The
dentist advised ‘saving this tooth would
require root canal treatment’, however, ‘due
to the specialised equipment and
radiographic requirements this treatment
could not be completed in the domiciliary
setting.’ ‘Extraction of the tooth’ was
identified as ‘another option but […] it may
need a surgical extraction.’ This was ‘not
recommended in a domiciliary setting
especially as we would need preoperative
radiographs to assess the root shape and the
proximity of the root to the floor of the
maxillary sinus. Extractions in this area
carry a risk of creating a communication
between the mouth and the sinus which could
need surgical closure hence radiographs
would be essential to assess this risk.’ The
dentist ‘advised Mr Assange he should seek
treatment in a clinical setting to prevent
further progression of his symptoms as soon
as possible.’1
-
On 4 December
2015, an opinion of the United Nations
Working Group on Arbitrary Detention (UNWGAD)
was formally adopted and it was published on
5 February 2016. It concluded that Mr
Assange was being arbitrarily detained by
the governments of the UK and Sweden.
Crucially, it was made clear at the time
that any continued arbitrary detention of Mr
Assange would constitute torture. The group
concluded that ‘the Embassy of Ecuador in
London is far less than a house or detention
centre equipped for prolonged pretrial
detention and lacks appropriate and
necessary medical equipment or facilities —
it is valid to assume, after five years of
deprivation of liberty, that Mr Assange’s
health could have deteriorated to such a
level that anything more than a superficial
illness would put his health at a serious
risk, and he was denied access to a medical
institution for a proper diagnosis,
including a magnetic resonance imaging
test.’2
-
On 8 December
2015, a doctor who saw Mr Assange reported:
‘progressive inflammation and stiffness
affecting his right shoulder. This
requires an MRI scan to determine the exact
diagnosis in order to inform a suitably
qualified physiotherapist as to how best to
treat him in an appropriately equipped
medical facility. His current circumstances
significantly compromise the ability to
satisfactorily investigate and treat him.’3
Mr Assange was refused access to a hospital
by the Foreign and Commonwealth Office.4
-
On 11 December
2015, a further doctor, a trauma and
psychosocial expert, reported: ‘Mr Assange
scored 15 out of 20 on the Patient Health
Questionnaire […] a multipurpose instrument
for screening, diagnosing, monitoring and
measuring the severity of depression. […] A
score of 15 indicates that Mr Assange
suffers from Major Depression (moderately
severe)’; ‘At a minimum, it is recommended
that his urgent medical complaints regarding
the pain in his shoulder be investigated
with appropriate equipment’; ‘The Embassy is
not a medical setting. The only way Mr
Assange can access either urgent medical
care or investigations would be to place
himself in the hands of the British
authorities. Mr Assange is in an invidious
position of having to decide between his
physical health and the risk of being
extradited to the United States. His
inability to access proper medical care and
assessment – without placing himself into
the hands of the authorities – transforms
each physical complaint no matter how simple
into something that could have catastrophic
consequences either for his health or his
liberty. He lives in a state of chronic
health insecurity’; and ‘The unusual
circumstances place Mr Assange in a
precarious situation. The effects of the
situation on Mr Assange’s health and
well-being are serious and the risks will
most certainly escalate with the potential
to becoming life threatening if current
conditions persist.’5
-
In October
2017, Doctors Sondra S. Crosby, Brock
Chisholm and Sean Love visited Mr Assange.6
The group examined him for 20 hours
over Three
days.7
In an article for the Guardian published on
24 January 2018 they wrote: ‘We examined
Julian Assange, and he badly needs care –
but he can’t get it’; ‘We call on the
British Medical Association and colleagues
in the UK to demand safe access to medical
care for Mr Assange and to oppose openly the
ongoing violations of his human right to
healthcare.’8
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-
On 19 June
2018, Dinah PoKempner, General Counsel at
Human Rights Watch, stated: ‘Concern is
growing over his access to medical care. His
asylum is growing more and more difficult to
distinguish from detention. The UK has the
power to resolve concerns over his
isolation, health, and confinement by
removing the threat of extradition for
publishing newsworthy leaks.’9
-
On 22 June
2018, Dr Sean Love, who over the course of
the previous year had visited Mr Assange
several times at the Ecuadorian embassy,
reiterated his concerns regarding Mr
Assange’s health and repeated his call in
the British Medical Journal for him to be
given access to
healthcare.10
Dr Love wrote that ‘Assange’s detention
continues to cause a precipitous
deterioration in his overall condition’ and
that ‘Because of his health issues, in 2015,
Ecuadorian authorities requested that he be
permitted humanitarian safe passage to a
hospital in London; however, this was denied
by the UK.’ Dr Love stated that ‘To this
day, Assange remains unable to access
hospital based diagnostic testing and
treatment—even for a medical emergency. In
effect, he has gone without proper access to
care for the duration of his six years in
confinement.’
-
On 21 December
2018, the United Nations Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention (UNWGAD) issued a
further statement opposing the continued
unlawful detention of Mr Assange: ‘States
that are based
upon
and promote the rule of law do not like to
be confronted with their own violations of
the law, that is understandable. But when
they honestly admit these violations, they
do honour the very spirit of the rule of
law, earn enhanced respect for doing so, and
set worldwide commendable examples.’ It
added: ‘The WGAD is further concerned that
the modalities of the continued arbitrary
deprivation of liberty of Mr Assange is
undermining his health, and may possibly
endanger his life given the disproportionate
amount of anxiety and stress that such
prolonged deprivation of liberty entails.’11
-
On 5 April
2019, Nils Melzer, the United Nations
Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other
Cruel, Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or
Punishment, issued a statement following
reports that Mr Assange may soon be expelled
from the Ecuadorian Embassy. He said,
‘According to information I have received,
Mr Assange is at risk of extreme
vulnerability, and his health is in serious
decline. I therefore appeal to the
Ecuadorian authorities to continue to
provide him, to the fullest extent possible
in the circumstances, with adequate living
conditions and access to appropriate medical
care.’12 On 11 April 2019, Mr
Assange was expelled from the Embassy and
arrested by the Metropolitan Police.
-
On 3 May 2019,
the UN Working Group on Arbitrary Detention
issued a statement noting it was ‘deeply
concerned’ over Assange’s 50 weeks
imprisonment. ‘The Working Group regrets
that the Government has not complied with
its Opinion and has now furthered the
arbitrary deprivation of liberty of Mr
Assange.14
-
On 9 May 2019,
Mr Melzer, the UN Special Rapporteur on
Torture and Other Cruel, Inhuman or
Degrading Treatment or Punishment, visited
Belmarsh prison accompanied by two medical
experts, with special expertise in assessing
victims of torture. This involved a
60-minute
conversation with Mr Assange, an hour-long
physical examination and a two-hour
psychiatric examination.
-
On 23 May 2019,
the US government brought charges under the
Espionage Act of 1917 against Mr Assange for
his publishing activities on behalf of
WikiLeaks. On 29 May 2019, Mr Assange was
moved to the ‘hospital wing’ at Belmarsh
prison following a reported significant
deterioration in his health. On 30 May 2019,
Mr Assange was too unwell to appear in
court, even via video link, for a
preliminary extradition hearing.15
It should be noted that the medical
facilities and staffing at Belmarsh prison
‘hospital wing’ have never been divulged to
the public.
-
On 31 May 2019,
Mr Melzer, the UN Special Rapporteur on
Torture, reported on his 9 May 2019 visit to
Mr Assange, ‘we all came to the conclusion
that he showed all the symptoms that are
typical for a person that has been exposed
to psychological torture over an extended
period of time.’16
-
On 22 October
2019, Craig Murray, a former British
Ambassador, published a detailed and
shocking eye witness account of Mr Assange’s
hearing the previous day, stating that he
‘exhibited exactly the symptoms of a torture
victim.’17 His report was
corroborated by the eyewitness account of
John Pilger, the renowned investigative
journalist and filmmaker.18
-
On 1 November
2019, UN Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils
Melzer reiterated his alarm at the continued
deterioration of Julian Assange’s health
since his arrest and detention earlier this
year, saying his life was now at risk. Mr
Melzer said, ‘What we have seen from the UK
Government is outright contempt for Mr
Assange’s rights and integrity,’ and
‘Despite the medical urgency of my appeal,
and the seriousness of the alleged
violations, the UK has not undertaken any
measures of investigation, prevention and
redress required under international law.’
Mr Melzer concluded: ‘Unless the UK urgently
changes course and
alleviates his inhumane situation, Mr
Assange’s continued exposure to
arbitrariness and abuse may soon end up
costing his life.’19
Medical doctors
have a professional duty to report suspected
torture of which they become aware, wherever it
may be occurring. That professional duty is
absolute and must be carried out regardless of
risk to reporting doctors. We wish to put on
record, as medical doctors, our collective
serious concerns and to draw the attention of
the public and the world to this grave
situation.
The World Health
Organisation Constitution of 1946 envisages ‘the
highest attainable standard of health as a
fundamental right of every human being.’20
We are indebted to those who have sought
to uphold this right in the case of Mr Assange.
From a medical
point of view, on the evidence currently
available, we have serious concerns about Mr
Assange’s fitness to stand trial in February
2020. Most importantly, it is our opinion that
Mr Assange requires urgent expert medical
assessment of both his physical and
psychological state of health. Any medical
treatment indicated should be administered in a
properly equipped and expertly staffed
university teaching hospital (tertiary care).
Were such urgent assessment and treatment not to
take place, we have real concerns, on the
evidence currently available, that Mr Assange
could die in prison. The medical situation is
thereby urgent. There is no time to lose.
APPENDIX
The United Nations
Special Rapporteur on Torture and Other Cruel,
Inhuman or Degrading Treatment or Punishment,
Nils Melzer, visited Mr Assange in Belmarsh
Prison on 9 May 2019, over six months ago. Mr
Melzer
was accompanied by two medical experts
specialised in examining victims of torture and
other ill-treatment. The team was able to speak
with Mr Assange in confidence and to conduct a
thorough medical assessment.
Mr Melzer’s report
was published on 31 May 2019:
‘It was obvious
that Mr Assange’s health has been seriously
affected by the extremely hostile and arbitrary
environment he has been exposed to for many
years,’ the expert said. ‘Most importantly, in
addition to physical ailments, Mr Assange showed
all symptoms typical for prolonged exposure to
psychological torture, including extreme stress,
chronic anxiety and intense psychological
trauma.
‘The evidence is
overwhelming and clear,’ the expert said. ‘Mr
Assange has been deliberately exposed, for a
period of several years, to progressively severe
forms of cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment
or punishment, the cumulative effects of which
can only be described as psychological torture.
‘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,’ Mr
Melzer said. ‘The collective persecution of
Julian Assange must end here and now!’
Report of Nils
Melzer, dated 31 May 2019:
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24
665
In his annual
report on 14 October 2019 to the Seventy-fourth
session of the UN General Assembly in New York,
Mr Melzer stated: ‘Further, I would like to
thank the Government of the United Kingdom for
having facilitated my visit to Mr Julian Assange
in Belmarsh Prison in London in May 2019,
including his examination by two experienced
medical experts. Although Mr Assange showed a
pattern of symptoms typical for long-term
exposure to psychological torture, I regret to
report that none of the concerned States have
agreed to investigate or redress their alleged
involvement in his abuse as required of them
under human rights law.’
Report of Nils
Melzer to the Seventy-fourth session of the UN
General Assembly on 14 October 2019:
https://peds-ansichten.de/wp-
content/uploads/2019/11/FinalSRTStatementGA14Oct-2019.pdf
Eyewitness account
of Craig Murray (former British Ambassador) of
events at Westminster Magistrates Court on
Monday 21 October 2019: https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/10/assange-in-court/
Eyewitness account
of John Pilger (investigative journalist) of
events at Westminster Magistrates Court on
Monday 21 October 2019: https://www.youtube.com/watch?v=GLXzudMCyM4
Report of Nils
Melzer, dated 5 April 2019:
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24454&LangID=E
Report of Nils
Melzer, dated 1 November 2019:
https://ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=25249&L
angID=E
ADDENDUM
It is noteworthy
that three of the medical practitioners, from
whose reports we have drawn, are unidentified,
their names having been redacted. In this
context, a telling passage from the 26 page
report of the psychological expert dated 11
December 2015 offers an insight into the climate
of fear and intimidation surrounding the
provision of medical care to Mr Assange. On page
20 of the report, under the heading ‘Medical
Practitioners’ Concerns regarding examining and
treating Mr Assange at the Embassy’, the unnamed
psychological expert noted:
‘One of Mr
Assange’s colleagues commented that there had
been many difficulties in finding medical
practitioners who were willing to examine Mr
Assange in the Embassy. The reasons given were
uncertainty over whether medical insurance would
cover the Embassy (a foreign jurisdiction);
whether the association with Mr Assange could
harm their livelihood or draw unwanted attention
to them and their families; and discomfort
regarding exposing this association when
entering the Embassy. One medical practitioner
expressed concern to one of the interviewees
after the police taking notes of his name and
the fact that he was visiting Mr Assange. One
medical practitioner wrote that he agreed to
produce a medical report only on condition that
his name not be made available
to the wider public, fearing repercussions.’21
It is likely that
the aforementioned climate of fear and
intimidation severely compromised the medical
care available to Mr Assange, even within the
Embassy, and given all the other concerns
surrounding the extraordinary treatment of Mr
Assange it is difficult to conclude other than
that the creation of that climate of fear and
intimidation was deliberate. If it was
deliberate, we as medical doctors condemn such
behaviour as reckless, dangerous and cruel. That
all this has been played out in the heart of
London for many years is a source of great
sadness and shame to many of us.
Signed:
Dr Mariagiulia
Agnoletto MD Specialist in Psychiatry ASST Monza
San Gerardo Hospital, Monza (Italy)
Dr Vittorio
Agnoletto MD Università degli Studi di Milano
Statale, Milano (Italy)
Dr Sonia Allam
MBChB FRCA Consultant in Anaesthesia and
Pre-operative Assessment, Forth Valley Royal
Hospital, Scotland (UK)
Dr Norbert Andersch
MD MRCPsych Consultant Neurologist and
Psychiatrist, South London and Maudsley NHS
Foundation Trust (retired); Lecturer in
Psychopathology at Sigmund Freud Private
University, Vienna-Berlin-Paris (Germany and UK)
Dr Marianne
Beaucamp MD Fachärztin (Specialist) in Neurology
& Psychiatry Psychoanalyst and Psychotherapist
(retired), Munich (Germany)
Dr Thed Beaucamp MD
Fachärztin (Specialist) in Neurology, Psychiatry
& Psychosomatic Medicine Psychoanalyst and
Psychotherapist (retired), Munich (Germany)
Dr Margaret Beavis
MBBS FRACGP MPH General Medical Practitioner
(Australia)
Dr David Bell
Consultant Psychiatrist and Psychoanalyst,
Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation Trust,
London (UK)
Mr Patrick John
Ramsay Boyd (signed John Boyd) MRCS LRCP MBBS
FRCS FEBU Consultant Urologist (retired) (UK)
Dr Hannah Caller
MBBS DCH Paediatrician, Homerton University
Hospital, London (UK)
Dr Franco Camandona
MD Specialist in Obstetrics & Gynaecology E.O.
Ospedali Galliera, Genova (Italy)
Dr Sylvia Chandler
MBChB MRCGP BA MA General Medical Practitioner
(retired) (UK)
Dr Marco Chiesa MD FRCPsych Consultant
Psychiatrist and Visiting Professor, University
College London (UK)
Dr Carla Eleonora Ciccone MD Specialist in
Obstetrics & Gynaecology AORN MOSCATI, Avellino
(Italy)
Dr Owen Dempsey MBBS BSc MSc PhD General Medical
Practitioner (retired) (UK)
Dr H R Dhammika MBBS Medical Officer,
Dehiattakandiya Base Hospital, Dehiattakandiya
(Sri Lanka)
Dr Tim Dowson MBChB MRCGP MSc MPhil Specialised
General Medical Practitioner in Substance
Misuse, Leeds (UK)
Miss Kamilia El-Farra MBChB FRCOG MPhil (Medical
Law and Ethics) Consultant Gynaecologist, Essex
(UK)
Dr Beata Farmanbar MD General Medical Practitioner
(Sweden)
Dr Tomasz Fortuna
MD RCPsych (affiliated) Forensic Child and
Adolescent Psychiatrist, Adult Psychotherapist
and Psychoanalyst, British Psychoanalytical
Society and Tavistock and Portman NHS Foundation
Trust, London (UK)
Dr C Stephen Frost
BSc MBChB Specialist in Diagnostic Radiology
(Stockholm, Sweden) (UK and Sweden)
Dr Peter Garrett MA
MD FRCP Independent writer and humanitarian
physician; Visiting Lecturer in Nephrology at
the University of Ulster (UK)
Dr Rachel Gibbons
MBBS BSc MRCPsych. M.Inst.Psychoanal.
Mem.Inst.G.A Consultant Psychiatrist (UK)
Dr Bob Gill MBChB
MRCGP General Medical Practitioner (UK)
Elizabeth Gordon MS
FRCS Consultant Surgeon (retired); Co-founder of
Freedom from Torture (UK)
Professor Derek A.
Gould MBChB MRCP DMRD FRCR Consultant
Interventional Radiologist (retired): BSIR Gold
Medal, 2010; over 110 peer-reviewed publications
in journals and chapters (UK)
Dr Jenny Grounds MD
General Medical Practitioner, Riddells Creek,
Victoria; Treasurer, Medical Association for
Prevention of War, Australia (Australia)
Dr Paul Hobday MBBS
FRCGP DRCOG DFSRH DPM General Medical
Practitioner (retired) (UK)
Mr David
Jameson-Evans MBBS FRCS Consultant Orthopaedic
and Trauma Surgeon (retired) (UK)
Dr Bob Johnson
MRCPsych MRCGP Diploma in Psychotherapy
Neurology & Psychiatry (Psychiatric Institute
New York) MA (Psychol) PhD (Med
Computing) MBCS DPM
MRCS Consultant Psychiatrist (retired); Formerly
Head of Therapy, Ashworth Maximum Security
Hospital, Liverpool; Formally Consultant
Psychiatrist, Special Unit, C-Wing, Parkhurst
Prison, Isle of Wight (UK)
Dr Lissa Johnson BA
BSc(Hons, Psych) MPsych(Clin) PhD Clinical
Psychologist (Australia)
Dr Anna Kacperek
MRCPsych Consultant Child and Adolescent
Psychiatrist, London (UK)
Dr Jessica Kirker
MBChB DipPsychiat MRCPsych FRANZCP MemberBPAS
Psychoanalyst and Consultant Medical
Psychotherapist (retired) (UK)
Dr Willi Mast MD
Facharzt für Allgemeinmedizin, Gelsenkirchen
(Germany)
Dr Janet Menage MA
MBChB General Medical Practitioner (retired);
qualified Psychological Counsellor; author of
published research into Post-Traumatic Stress
Disorder (UK)
Professor Alan
Meyers MD MPH Emeritus Professor of Paediatrics,
Boston University School of Medicine, Boston,
Massachusetts (USA)
Dr Salique Miah BSc
MBChB FRCEM DTM&H ARCS Consultant in Emergency
Medicine, Manchester (UK)
Dr David Morgan
DClinPsych MSc Fellow of British Psychoanalytic
Society Psychoanalyst, Consultant Clinical
Psychologist and Consultant Psychotherapist (UK)
Dr Helen Murrell
MBChB MRCGP General Medical Practitioner,
Gateshead (UK)
Dr Alison Anne
Noonan MBBS (Sydney) MD (Rome) MA (Sydney)
ANZSJA IAAP AAGP IAP Psychiatrist,
Psychoanalyst, Specialist Outreach Northern
Territory, Executive Medical Association for
Prevention of War (NSW) (Australia)
Dr Alison Payne BSc
MBChB DRCOG MRCGP prev FRNZGP General Medical
Practitioner, Coventry; special interest in
mental health/trauma and refugee health (UK)
Dr Peter Pech MD
Specialist in Diagnostic Radiology
(sub-specialty Paediatric Radiology), Akademiska
Sjukhuset (Uppsala University Hospital), Uppsala
(Sweden)
Dr Tomasz
Pierscionek MRes MBBS MRCPsych PGDip (UK)
Professor Allyson M
Pollock MBChB MSc FFPH FRCGP FRCP (Ed) Professor
of Public Health, Newcastle University (UK)
Dr Abdulsatar
Ravalia FRCA Consultant Anaesthetist (UK)
Dr. med. Ullrich
Raupp MD Specialist in Psychotherapy, Child
Psychiatry and Child Neurology; Psychodynamic
Supervisor (DGSv) Wesel, Germany (Germany)
Mr John H Scurr BSc
MBBS FRCS Consultant General and Vascular
Surgeon, University College Hospital, London
(UK)
Dr Peter Shannon
MBBS (UWA) DPM (Melb) FRANZCP Adult Psychiatrist
(retired) (Australia)
Dr Gustaw Sikora MD
PhD F Inst Psychoanalysis Fellow of British
Psychoanalytic Society Specialist Psychiatrist
(diploids obtained in Poland and registered in
the UK); Psychoanalyst; currently in private
practice (UK and Poland)
Dr Wilhelm Skogstad
MRCPsych BPAS IPA Psychiatrist & Psychoanalyst,
London, United Kingdom (UK and Germany)
Dr John Stace MBBS
(UNSW) FRACGP FACRRM FRACMA MHA (UNSW) Country
Doctor (retired), Perth (Australia)
Dr Derek
Summerfield BSc (Hons) MBBS MRCPsych Honorary
Senior Clinical Lecturer, Institute of
Psychiatry, Psychology & Neuroscience, King’s
College London (UK)
Dr Rob Tandy MBBS
MRCPsych Consultant Psychiatrist in
Psychotherapy & Psychoanalyst; Unit Head,
Psychoanalytic Treatment Unit, Tavistock and
Portman, London; City & Hackney Primary Care
Psychotherapy Consultation Service, St Leonard’s
Hospital, London (UK)
Dr Noel Thomas MA
MBChB DCH DobsRCOG DTM&H MFHom General Medical
Practitioner; homeopath; has assisted on
health/education projects in six developing
countries Maesteg, Wales (UK)
Dr Philip Thomas
MBChB DPM MPhil MD Formerly Professor of
Philosophy Diversity & Mental Health, University
of Central Lancashire; Formally Consultant
Psychiatrist (UK)
Dr Gianni Tognoni
MD Istituto Mario Negri, Milano (Italy)
Dr Sebastião Viola
Lic Med MRCPsych Consultant Psychiatrist,
Cardiff (UK)
Dr Peter Walger MD
Consultant, Infectious Disease Specialist, Bonn-
Duesseldorf-Berlin (Germany)
Dr Sue Wareham OAM
MBBS General Medical Practitioner (retired)
(Australia)
Dr Eric Windgassen
MRCPsych PGDipMBA Consultant Psychiatrist
(retired) (UK)
Dr Pam Wortley MBBS
MRCGP General Medical Practitioner (retired),
Sunderland (UK)
Dr Matthew Yakimoff
BOralH (DSc) GDipDent General Dental
Practitioner (Australia)
Dr Rosemary Yuille
BSc (Hons Anatomy) MBBS (Hons) General Medical
Practitioner (retired), Canberra (Australia)
Dr Felicity de
Zulueta Emeritus Consultant Psychiatrist in
Psychotherapy, South London and Maudsley NHS
Foundation Trust; Honorary Senior Clinical
Lecturer in Traumatic Studies, King’s College
London (UK)
Dr Paquita de
Zulueta MBBChir MA (Cantab) MA (Medical Law &
Ethics) MRCP FRCGP PGDipCBT CBT Therapist and
Coach; Senior Tutor Medical Ethics; Honorary
Senior Clinical Lecturer, Dept of Primary Care &
Population Health, Imperial College London (UK)
NOTES:
1 Dr
[Redacted], BChD MFGDP(UK) MSc, Dental Surgeon,
carried out an emergency dental appointment at
the Embassy on 8 May 2015: https://file.wikileaks.org/file/cms/Dentist%20report%20310715.pdf
2
Opinions adopted by the Working Group on
Arbitrary Detention at its seventy-fourth
session, 30 November-4 December 2015, Opinion
No. 54/2015 concerning Julian Assange (Sweden
and the United Kingdom of Great Britain and
Northern Ireland):
http://www.ohchr.org/Documents/Issues/Detention/A.HRC.WGAD.2015.docx
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=17012&LangID=E
3 Dr
[Redacted] MA MB BChir DCH MRCGP assessed Mr
Assange on 12 August 2015 and 2 December 2015:
https://file.wikileaks.org/file/cms/Medical.pdf
4https://www.theguardian.com/media/2015/oct/15/ecuador-asks-britain-to-allow-julian-assange-safe-passage-for-mri-scan;
https://www.theguardian.com/uk-news/2015/oct/15/julian-assange-shoulder-pain-mri-scan-embassy-metropolitan-police;
https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/wikileaks-files/11932732/Wikileaks-
Julain-Assange-refused-safe-passage-for-MRI-scan.html
5 Dr
[Redacted], Trauma and Psychosocial Expert,
interviewed Mr Assange on five occasions between
June 2014 and June 2015, and interviewed Mr
Assange on two further occasions to validate
previous findings: https://file.wikileaks.org/file/cms/Psychosocial%20Medical%20Report%20December%202015.pdf
6 Dr
Sean Love is a Resident Physician in
Anaesthesiology and an Adult Critical Care
Medicine Fellow at the Johns Hopkins University
School of Medicine. Dr Sondra S Crosby is a
medical doctor and Professor of Medicine at
Boston University, specialising in internal
medicine. She is also a faculty member of the
Health Law,
Bioethics and Human
Rights department at the Boston University
School of Public Health. Dr Brock Chisholm is a
Consultant Clinical Psychologist with a degree
in Psychology, a Masters in Psychological
Research Methods and a Doctorate in Clinical
Psychology and extensive experience in working
with victims of trauma.
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Notes
7
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2018/jan/24/julian-assanges-health-in-dangerous-condition-say-
doctors;
https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jan/24/julian-assange-care-wikileaks-
ecuadorian-embassy;
https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2018/06/22/sean-love-access-medical-care-must-
guaranteed-julian-assange/#_ftn1
8 https://www.theguardian.com/commentisfree/2018/jan/24/julian-assange-care-wikileaks-ecuadorian-
embassy
9 https://www.hrw.org/news/2018/06/19/uk-should-reject-extraditing-julian-assange-us
10 https://blogs.bmj.com/bmj/2018/06/22/sean-love-access-medical-care-must-guaranteed-julian-assange/
11
https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24042
12 https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24454&LangID=E
13 https://www.express.co.uk/life-style/health/1121387/julian-assange-depression-symptoms-mental-health-
treatment
14 https://www.ohchr.org/en/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24552&LangID=E
15https://metro.co.uk/2019/05/30/wikileaks-grave-concerns-julian-assange-moved-prison-hospital-9738883/;
https://www.theguardian.com/media/2019/may/30/julian-assange-too-ill-appear-court-via-video-link-
lawyers-say;
https://news.sky.com/story/julian-assange-moved-to-medical-wing-in-belmarsh-prison-over-
significantly-deteriorated-health-11731364
16 https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=24665
17 https://www.craigmurray.org.uk/archives/2019/10/assange-in-court/
18 https://youtu.be/GLXzudMCyM4
19 https://www.ohchr.org/EN/NewsEvents/Pages/DisplayNews.aspx?NewsID=25249&LangID=E
20 https://www.who.int/news-room/fact-sheets/detail/human-rights-and-health
21 Dr
[Redacted], Trauma and Psychosocial Expert,
interviewed Mr Assange on five occasions between
June 2014 and June 2015, and interviewed Mr
Assange on two further occasions to validate
previous findings: https://file.wikileaks.org/file/cms/Psychosocial%20Medical%20Report%20December%202015.pdf.