By Israel Shamir
March 14, 2020 "Information
Clearing House" -
Julian Assange’s extradition hearing has had very
little media coverage. Even The Guardian and
The New York Times barely mentioned it,
though these newspapers made a fortune publishing
Assange-provided cables. Unless you had been looking
for it, you wouldn’t even know that on February 24
to 27, the first stage of Assange’s extradition
hearing was being adjudicated in the secretive
Woolwich Crown Court embedded within the huge
Belmarsh Prison nicknamed “British Gitmo”. Luckily
for us, Ambassador Craig Murray, the indomitable
truth fighter, went there, waited in line for hours
in the rain, underwent searches and discomfort, and
wrote an
extensive report (12,000 words) on this travesty
of justice that went under the name of a ‘trial’.
His reports leave nothing out, from the threatening
atmosphere to the sinister legal arguments. He
captured the menace and the abuse bordering with
public torture, and delivered it to the world,
something that none of the journalists on the
payroll of the mass media had been allowed to do.
Here are some insights from his report in my free
rendering augmented with other sources.
The Court is designed with no
other purpose than to exclude the public, on an
island accessible only through navigating a maze of
dual carriageways, the entire location and
architecture of the building is predicated on
preventing public access. It is in truth just the
sentencing wing of Belmarsh prison.
The judge, the Magistrate (or
District Judge) Vanessa Baraitser is a modern
version of the
Hanging Judge George Jeffreys, a female Judge
Dredd. She is the chief villain by all descriptions
of the trial, not just tolerating but exceeding the
demands of the prosecution. The lawyers acting for
the prosecution did request some niceties if only
for the trial to appear fair. Baraitser had no such
pretensions. She went straight for the jugular. If
she could, she would hang Assange right away.
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This Jewish lady is
surrounded by mystery: she has left no trace
upon the Internet. A newly born child has
more Internet presence than this middle-aged
woman. I doubt such a blank slate could be
achieved nowadays without the active
assistance of the Secret Services.
Ambassador Murray writes: “Ms
Baraitser is not fond of photography – she appears
to be the only public figure in Western Europe with
no photo on the internet. Indeed the average
proprietor of a rural car wash has left more
evidence of their existence and life history on the
Internet than Vanessa Baraitser. Which is no crime
on her part, but I suspect the expunging is not
achieved without considerable effort. Somebody
suggested to me she might be a hologram, but I think
not. Holograms have more empathy.”
John Pilger saw Baraitser in
action during the previous round of Assange hearings
in October 2019. He wrote: “I have sat in many
courtrooms and seen judges abuse their positions.
This judge, Vanessa Baraitser shocked all of us who
were there. Her face was a progression of sneers and
imperious indifference; she addressed Julian with
cruel arrogance. When Assange spoke, Baraitser
contrived boredom; when the prosecuting barrister
spoke, she was attentive. When Julian’s barrister
described the CIA spying on him, she didn’t yawn,
but her disinterest was as expressive. Her knee in
the groin was to announce that the next court
hearing would be at remote Woolwich, which adjoins
Belmarsh Prison and has few seats for the public.
This will ensure isolation and be as close to a
secret trial as it’s possible to get.”
It turned out to be
practically a secret trial. There were MSM
journalists, but “not a single one of the most
important facts and arguments today has been
reported anywhere in the mainstream media.”
On the first day, James Lewis
QC for the prosecution tried to drive a wedge
between Assange and the media. He claimed that in no
way are mainstream outlets like The Guardian
and The New York Times threatened by this
trial, because Assange was not charged with
publishing the cables but only with publishing the
names of informants, cultivating Manning and
assisting him to attempt computer hacking. The
mainstream outlets are not guilty of any crimes,
having only published sanitised cables.
But Judge Baraitser didn’t
accept this vegetarian approach. She thirsted for
blood. She referred to the Official Secrets Act
1989, which declares that merely obtaining and
publishing any government secret is an offence.
Surely, Baraitser suggested, that meant that
newspapers publishing the Manning leaks would be
guilty of a serious offence?
Lewis agreed with the judge
and admitted that indeed, the mainstream journalists
also are guilty, fully denying what he said in his
opening statement. In the end, none of this
role-play mattered since none of the media reported
on this exchange, as it wasn’t inserted into the
daily press release. The MSM journalists used only
these prepared texts, so convenient for copying and
pasting into their own reports.
The main argument of the
defence was that the motive for the prosecution was
entirely political, and that political offences were
specifically excluded under the UK/US extradition
treaty. For a normal human judge, that would suffice
to dismiss the case. But Baraitser had a trick up
her sleeve. Although the US/UK Extradition Treaty
forbade political extraditions, this was only the
Treaty, and this is not an international court, she
said. That exemption does not appear in the UK
Extradition Act. Therefore political extradition is
not illegal in the UK, as the Treaty has no legal
force on her Court. With such a judge, who needs the
prosecution?
The defence quickly
demolished the judge’s devious rationalisations by
pointing out that every extradition must satisfy two
standards: (1) that of the UK Extradition Act, and
(2) the specific Extradition Treaty with the country
in question. Both are necessary; no man can be
extradited to a specific country without consulting
the specific treaty. The UK Extradition Act sets the
ground rules. It is the relevant extradition treaty
that sets out the conditions by which a prisoner
might be extradited to a specific country. The Act
allowed for a political extradition, and if the
specific extradition treaty allowed it, the prisoner
could be extradited. But this specific, namely US/UK
extradition treaty does not permit political
extraditions. Ergo, Assange could not be extradited
by law.
Indeed a sixth-grade student
could follow this simple logic. However, the
dastardly Ms Baraitser kept repeating her claim that
the Act does not forbid political extradition. We do
not know what black spots hidden in the murky past
of Judge Baraitser required that her history be
blotted out by MI5’s dark adepts, but I harbour a
suspicion that this Jewish lady has had some field
practice in the Jewish state, where judges
invariably find the accused goy liable and guilty,
and every torture is tolerated or even encouraged.
Her main preoccupation seemed
to be in arranging Julian’s suicide – or at least
dishearten him to the point where his death by
throttling might be explained away as suicide. He
certainly seemed to be dispirited. The distinguished
psychiatrist Professor Michael Kopelman provided a
psychiatric assessment of Assange to the court:
“Mr Assange shows virtually
all the risk factors which researchers from Oxford
have described in prisoners who either suicide or
make lethal attempts. … I am as confident as a
psychiatrist can ever be that, if extradition to the
United States were to become imminent, Mr Assange
would find a way of suiciding.”
These words are especially
poignant today, as it was
reported that Manning attempted to commit
suicide being locked up since last May at a
detention centre in Alexandria, Va for steadfast
refusal to bring evidence against Assange. The US/UK
Deep State is a vengeful vicious beast that wants to
punish Assange and Manning for revealing its nasty
secrets. It is only the “whistle-blowers” who
accused Trump and exonerated the Thief of Ukraine
Biden that are protected.
In order to push Assange
deeper into black despair, Baraitser enforced the
regime of strict isolation on the prisoner. Assange
had been kept in a bulletproof glass cage, unable to
hear or to exchange notes with his lawyers. “I
believe – wrote Craig Murray, – that the Hannibal
Lecter style confinement of Assange, this
intellectual computer geek, is a deliberate attempt
to drive Julian to suicide.”
Julian is cruelly mistreated.
When his Spanish lawyer left court to return home,
on the way out he naturally stopped to shake hands
with his client, proffering his fingers through the
narrow slit in the glass cage. Assange half stood to
take his lawyer’s hand. The two security guards in
the cage with Assange immediately sprang up, putting
hands on Julian and forcing him to sit down,
preventing the handshake.
On the first day of trial,
Julian had twice been stripped naked and searched,
eleven times been handcuffed, and five times been
locked up in different holding cells. The lawyer for
the defence, Fitzgerald, asked the judge to
interfere and save Julian from this rough
mistreatment.
The Baraitser stared down
Fitzgerald and stated, in a voice laced with
disdain, that he had raised such matters before and
she had always replied that she had no jurisdiction
over the prison estate. You might make a
recommendation, suggested Fitzgerald, they
usually listen to judge’s remarks. Even the
prosecution counsel James Lewis stood up to say the
prosecution would also like Assange to have a fair
hearing, and that he could confirm that what the
defence were suggesting was normal practice. But
bloodthirsty Baraitser flatly refused.
Edward Fitzgerald made a
formal application for Julian to be allowed to sit
beside his lawyers in the court. Julian was “a
gentle, intellectual man” and not a terrorist.
Baraitser replied that releasing Assange from the
dock into the body of the court would mean he was
released from custody. That is obviously nonsense.
Again, the prosecution counsel James Lewis
intervened on the side of the defence, for
Baraitser’s notion of law would not work anywhere
outside Israeli courts in the occupied West Bank.
Lewis said that prisoners, even the most dangerous
of terrorists, gave evidence from the witness box in
the body of the court next to the lawyers and
magistrate. In the High Court prisoners frequently
sat with their lawyers in extradition hearings, in
extreme cases of violent criminals handcuffed to a
security officer.
Baraitser replied that
Assange might pose a danger to the public. It was a
question of health and safety. Health and safety,
forsooth! Such cynicism may be unprecedented in
British justice, and it should reserve a special
place in hell for Ms Baraitser.
Why should she keep Assange
in that box, unable to hear proceedings or instruct
his lawyers, when even counsel for the US Government
does not object to Assange openly sitting in the
court? He is brought handcuffed and under heavy
escort to and from his solitary cell to the armoured
dock via an underground tunnel. In these
circumstances, what possible need is there for him
to be repeatedly strip- and cavity-searched? Why is
he not permitted to shake hands or touch his lawyers
through the slit in the armoured glass box?
It is a torture session, not
a hearing. And the hearing, or rather the torture
will continue in May, – if Julian is still alive.
Israel Shamir can be
reached at
adam@israelshamir.net -
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