This Assange “Trial” Is A
Self-Contradictory Kafkaesque Nightmare
By Caitlin Johnstone
February 28, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" - The first week of the Julian Assange extradition
trial
has concluded, to be resumed on May 18th. If you
haven’t been following the proceedings closely, let
me sum up what you missed:
The prosecution is
working to extradite Assange to the US under a US-UK
extradition treaty, a treaty whose contents the
prosecution now says we should ignore because they
explicitly forbid political extraditions. The
prosecution says it doesn’t matter anyway because
Assange is not a political actor, yet in 2010 the US
government that’s trying to extradite him labeled
him a political actor in those exact words. Assange’s
trial is taking place in a maximum security prison
for dangerous violent offenders because that’s where
he’s being jailed for no stated reason and despite
having no history of violence, which means he’s kept
separate from the courtroom in a sound-resistant
safety enclosure where he can’t hear or participate
in his own trial. The magistrate judging the case
says he can’t be allowed out of the enclosure since
he’s considered dangerous, because he’s been
arbitrarily placed in a prison for dangerous violent
offenders. The magistrate keeps telling Assange to
stop speaking up during his trial and to speak
through his lawyers, yet he’s being actively
prevented from communicating with his lawyers.
Make sense?
No?
Not even a tiny bit?
Oh. Okay. Let me explain.
It’s
common in British courtrooms to have something
called a “dock”, a place where defendants sit
separately from court proceedings. Not all UK
courtrooms have docks, and not all docks are the
“secure” glass cabinet type which Assange is kept
in; they
can
also be open wooden enclosures. Because Assange
is being kept without explanation in a maximum
security prison
normally reserved the most dangerous violent
offenders and terrorism convicts, his trial is
taking place in a cage that is very much the
“secure” type (so much so that he’s been
complaining that he can’t hear the proceedings
in his own trial through the bulletproof glass), and
there is an expectation that he remain there.
The magistrate has ruled that this nonviolent
offender shall be kept in his sound-resistant
enclosure throughout the duration of his trial,
bizarrely asserting that Assange poses a danger to
the public.