UN Special Rapporteur On Torture Demolishes The Fake Claims Targeting Julian Assange
On the face of it,
the task seems almost hopeless. As Tolstoy
wrote: ‘The power of the government is
maintained by public opinion, and with this power the
government, by means of its organs – its officials, law
courts, schools, churches, even the press – can always
maintain the public opinion which they need.’ (Leo
Tolstoy, ‘Writings on Non-Violence and Civil
Disobedience,’ New Society Publishers, 1987,
p.111) Last December, we witnessed the
awesome capacity of state-corporate power to manipulate
public opinion and undermine a democratic election with a
ruthless propaganda campaign smearing Jeremy Corbyn, a
passionate anti-racist. The campaign depicted
Corbyn, not just as an anti-semite, but as someone who might
‘reopen Auschwitz’. The truth wasn’t just distorted,
it was reversed. Israeli-born academic and author
Jamie Stern-Weiner has commented: ‘no
mainstream reporter ever investigated whether the
allegations against Labour were
true. ‘Where journalists
did not reflexively endorse the accusations against Labour,
they were content to uncritically relay them alongside the
party’s
response. ‘Accusations by
Jewish communal figures or anti-Corbyn MPs were considered
inherently significant, whether or not they were accompanied
by supporting evidence.’ Careful,
credible analysis that made a nonsense of the claims here,
here
and here
was simply ignored. Vested interests may appear to
hold all the cards – they work hard to give that
impression – but this is only an appearance. The very fact
that they work so relentlessly to shape public opinion
indicates the precarious nature of their
dominance. The problem is inherent, structural – a
‘democratic’ society that subordinates the needs of the
many to the needs of the few is a society based on lies.
Propaganda obfuscating those lies can be disseminated
endlessly, day and night, but it will always be vulnerable
to individuals and groups with genuine expertise motivated
by genuine concern for others. As the Buddhist sage Je
Gampopa commented: ‘Even a single
virtuous act overcomes many evils… a small good action can
overcome a great wrong; it is highly efficient.’ (Gampopa,
‘Gems of Dharma, Jewels of Freedom,’ Altea, 1994,
p.135) Following in the footsteps of
senior UN officials like Denis Halliday, Hans von Sponeck
and Scott Ritter – who, between them, demolished many of
the deceptions ‘justifying’ the genocidal 1990s US-UK
sanctions regime in Iraq and the 2003 war of aggression on
Iraq – consider the ‘highly efficient’ comments
made to the Swiss magazine, Republik, by Nils Melzer on
Julian Assange: ‘Four democratic
countries joined forces – the U.S., Ecuador, Sweden and
the UK – to leverage their power to portray one man as a
monster so that he could later be burned at the stake
without any outcry. The case is a huge scandal and
represents the failure of Western rule of law. If Julian
Assange is convicted, it will be a death sentence for
freedom of the press.’ The problem for
the propaganda system targeting Assange is that Melzer is
not just someone blogging on the internet; he is the UN
Special Rapporteur on Torture. In addition, he is a
professor of international law at the University of Glasgow
and holds the Human Rights Chair at the Geneva Academy of
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights in
Switzerland, where he has been teaching since 2009,
including as the Swiss Chair of International Humanitarian
Law (2011–2013). Melzer even speaks fluent Swedish. In
other words, it is hard to imagine anyone better qualified
to comment on the Assange case. Melzer describes how,
on August 20, 2010, a headline appeared on the front page of
Expressen, a leading Swedish tabloid, declaring that Julian
Assange was suspected of having committed two rapes. Melzer
describes his reaction on investigating these
claims: ‘I speak fluent Swedish and was
thus able to read all of the original documents. I could
hardly believe my eyes: According to the testimony of the
woman in question, a rape had never even taken place at all.
And not only that: The woman’s testimony was later changed
by the Stockholm police without her involvement in order to
somehow make it sound like a possible rape. I have all the
documents in my possession, the emails, the text
messages.’ The order of events is
extraordinary and outrageous: ‘A woman
walks into a police station. She doesn’t want to file a
complaint but wants to demand an HIV test. The police then
decide that this could be a case of rape and a matter for
public prosecutors. The woman refuses to go along with that
version of events and then goes home and writes a friend
that it wasn’t her intention, but the police want to
“get their hands on” Assange. Two hours later, the case
is in the newspaper. As we know today, public prosecutors
leaked it to the press – and they did so without even
inviting Assange to make a statement. And the second woman,
who had allegedly been raped according to the Aug. 20
headline, was only questioned on Aug.
21.’ As Melzer says, this behaviour
demonstrated the ‘willful malevolence of the
authorities’. Melzer leaves no doubt about the real
significance of the rape
claims: ‘Imagine a dark room. Suddenly,
someone shines a light on the elephant in the room – on
war criminals, on corruption. Assange is the man with the
spotlight. The governments are briefly in shock, but then
they turn the spotlight around with accusations of rape. It
is a classic maneuver when it comes to manipulating public
opinion. The elephant once again disappears into the
darkness, behind the spotlight. And Assange becomes the
focus of attention instead, and we start talking about
whether Assange is skateboarding in the embassy or whether
he is feeding his cat correctly.’ The
goal: ‘A show trial is to be used to
make an example of Julian Assange. The point is to
intimidate other journalists. Intimidation, by the way, is
one of the primary purposes for the use of torture around
the world. The message to all of us is: This is what will
happen to you if you emulate the Wikileaks
model.’ It is very much to Melzer’s
credit that he admits that he was himself initially taken in
by the propaganda campaign. He reveals that, in December
2018, he was asked by Assange’s lawyers to intervene. He
declined: ‘I was overloaded with other
petitions and wasn’t really familiar with the case. My
impression, largely influenced by the media, was also
colored by the prejudice that Julian Assange was somehow
guilty and that he wanted to manipulate
me.’ After Assange’s lawyers made a
second request in March 2019, Melzer felt that that ‘my
professional integrity demanded that I at least take a look
at the material’. The result: ‘It
quickly became clear to me that something was
wrong.’ With unprecedented clarity,
Melzer unpacks the meaning of the many bizarre twists and
turns in the political persecution of Assange. Was it true,
as so many journalists claim, that Assange sought asylum in
the Ecuadorian embassy to evade Swedish justice? Melzer
comments: ‘The [Assange] lawyers say
that during the nearly seven years in which Assange lived in
the Ecuadorian Embassy, they made over 30 offers to arrange
for Assange to visit Sweden – in exchange for a guarantee
that he would not be extradited to the U.S. The Swedes
declined to provide such a guarantee by arguing that the
U.S. had not made a formal request for
extradition.’ Was this standard
practice? ‘Such diplomatic assurances
are a routine international practice… I say this on the
strength of all of my experience behind the scenes of
standard international practice: If a country refuses to
provide such a diplomatic assurance, then all doubts about
the good intentions of the country in question are
justified. Why shouldn’t Sweden provide such assurances?
From a legal perspective, after all, the U.S. has absolutely
nothing to do with Swedish sex offense
proceedings.’ Melzer was asked if it
was normal, or legally acceptable, for Swedish authorities
to travel abroad for such an
interrogation: ‘For exactly these kinds
of judiciary issues, there is a cooperation treaty between
the United Kingdom and Sweden, which foresees that Swedish
officials can travel to the UK, or vice versa, to conduct
interrogations or that such questioning can take place via
video link. During the period of time in question, such
questioning between Sweden and England took place in 44
other cases. It was only in Julian Assange’s case that
Sweden insisted that it was essential for him to appear in
person.’ Melzer’s
conclusion: ‘From my perspective, Sweden
very clearly acted in bad faith. Had they acted in good
faith, there would have been no reason to refuse to answer
my questions. The same holds true for the British: Following
my visit to Assange in May 2019, they took six months to
answer me – in a single-page letter, which was primarily
limited to rejecting all accusations of torture and all
inconsistencies in the legal proceedings. If you’re going
to play games like that, then what’s the point of my
mandate? I am the Special Rapporteur on Torture for the
United Nations. I have a mandate to ask clear questions and
to demand answers.’ He
adds: ‘There is only a single
explanation for everything – for the refusal to grant
diplomatic assurances, for the refusal to question him in
London: They wanted to apprehend him so they could extradite
him to the U.S. The number of breaches of law that
accumulated in Sweden within just a few weeks during the
preliminary criminal investigation is simply
grotesque.’ The media version was
rather different. In 2012, the Guardian’s Laura Barton wrote
of Assange and the Ecuadorian
embassy: ‘Poor Julian. It can’t be
easy to be confined to one building, no matter how
prestigious the postcode… And so we decided to assemble a
collection of items that Assange might be missing, and
deliver them.’ A photograph showed an
unsmiling Barton delivering a Guardian hamper to their bete
noire at the Ecuadorian embassy: ‘we
packed our hamper with a selection of edible items not
native to Ecuador – Kellogg’s cornflakes fortified with
vitamin D to compensate for the lack of sunlight in
Assange’s life, a jar of Vegemite (as an antipodean,
Julian was likely to spurn Marmite), a packet of
chocolate-chip cookies, and a punnet of
clementines. ‘Recalling
that Bill Keller, editor of the New York Times, once
remarked upon Assange’s questionable hygiene and the fact
he wore “filthy white socks” we added three pairs of
crisp, white sports socks and a shower gel in the
“feelgood fragrance of eucalyptus and citrus oils” that
promised to be both “revitalizing” and
“refreshing.”’ We have documented
many similar examples of this relentless, ferocious and
frankly weird corporate media mockery of Assange here
and here. Assange
is currently being held in London’s Belmarsh prison prior
to a hearing that will determine if he is to be extradited
to the US. He has already served a 50-week sentence for
skipping bail. Melzer comments on this
sentence: ‘It is obvious that what we
are dealing with here is political persecution. In Britain,
bail violations seldom lead to prison sentences – they are
generally subject only to fines. Assange, by contrast, was
sentenced in summary proceedings to 50 weeks in a
maximum-security prison – clearly a disproportionate
penalty that had only a single purpose: Holding Assange long
enough for the U.S. to prepare their espionage case against
him.’ A US grand jury has indicted
Assange on 18 charges – 17 of which fall under the US
Espionage Act – around conspiracy to receive, obtain and
disclose classified diplomatic and military documents.
Melzer explains why Assange has no chance of receiving
justice in the US: ‘He will not receive
a trial consistent with the rule of law. That’s another
reason why his extradition shouldn’t be allowed. Assange
will receive a trial-by-jury in Alexandria, Virginia – the
notorious “Espionage Court” where the U.S. tries all
national security cases. The choice of location is not by
coincidence, because the jury members must be chosen in
proportion to the local population, and 85 percent of
Alexandria residents work in the national security community
– at the CIA, the NSA, the Defense Department and the
State Department. When people are tried for harming national
security in front of a jury like that, the verdict is clear
from the very beginning. The cases are always tried in front
of the same judge behind closed doors and on the strength of
classified evidence. Nobody has ever been acquitted there in
a case like that. The result being that most defendants
reach a settlement, in which they admit to partial guilt so
as to receive a milder
sentence.’ Meanwhile, Assange’s
physical condition has continued to
deteriorate: ‘I visited Assange in his
cell in London in May 2019 together with two experienced,
widely respected doctors who are specialized in the forensic
and psychological examination of torture victims. The
diagnosis arrived at by the two doctors was clear: Julian
Assange displays the typical symptoms of psychological
torture. If he doesn’t receive protection soon, a rapid
deterioration of his health is likely, and death could be
one outcome.’ Melzer’s conclusions
are utterly damning: ‘We have to stop
believing that there was really an interest in leading an
investigation into a sexual offense. What Wikileaks did is a
threat to the political elite in the U.S., Britain, France
and Russia in equal measure. Wikileaks publishes secret
state information – they are opposed to classification.
And in a world, even in so-called mature democracies, where
secrecy has become rampant, that is seen as a fundamental
threat.’ He
adds: ‘We give countries power and
delegate it to governments – but in return, they must be
held accountable for how they exercise that power. If we
don’t demand that they be held accountable, we will lose
our rights sooner or later. Humans are not democratic by
their nature. Power corrupts if it is not monitored.
Corruption is the result if we do not insist that power be
monitored.’ His final thoughts are an
urgent warning to us all: ‘I have seen
lots of horrors and violence and have seen how quickly
peaceful countries like Yugoslavia or Rwanda can transform
into infernos. At the roots of such developments are always
a lack of transparency and unbridled political or economic
power combined with the naivete, indifference and
malleability of the population. Suddenly, that which always
happened to the other – unpunished torture, rape,
expulsion and murder – can just as easily happen to us or
our children. And nobody will care. I can promise you
that.’ We tweeted
the Guardian editor and a number of key Guardian journalists
who have commented on Assange: ‘For the
first time, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Nils
Melzer, speaks in detail about the explosive findings of his
investigation into the case of Julian Assange. Please read
and comment @KathViner @MarinaHyde @suzanne_moore
@GeorgeMonbiot @HadleyFreeman
@OwenJones84’ We also tweeted: ‘As
@NilsMelzer says, a failure to respond to his findings
indicates a lack of good faith. Please respond @KathViner
@MarinaHyde @suzanne_moore @GeorgeMonbiot @HadleyFreeman
@OwenJones84’ We also wrote
to Ash Sarkar, contributing editor at Novara Media, who
described Assange on Twitter as ‘a definite creep, a
probable rapist, a conspiracist
whackjob’: ‘Hi @AyoCaesar, will you
please respond to these comments from @NilsMelzer, UN
Special Rapporteur on Torture, on attempts to portray Julian
Assange ‘as a monster so that he could later be burned at
the stake without any outcry’? @novaramedia
@AaronBastani’ We received no answer
from any of the journalists contacted (to be fair to Monbiot
and Jones, having blocked us on Twitter for sending them
polite, rational challenges, they may not have seen our
tweet). Despite the credibility and integrity of the
source, and the obvious newsworthiness of the issue, our
ProQuest database search finds that Nils Melzer and his
comments published in Republik on 31 January have not been
mentioned in any US or UK media
outlet. On the face of it,
the task seems almost hopeless. As Tolstoy
wrote: ‘The power of the government is
maintained by public opinion, and with this power the
government, by means of its organs – its officials, law
courts, schools, churches, even the press – can always
maintain the public opinion which they need.’ (Leo
Tolstoy, ‘Writings on Non-Violence and Civil
Disobedience,’ New Society Publishers, 1987,
p.111) Last December, we witnessed the
awesome capacity of state-corporate power to manipulate
public opinion and undermine a democratic election with a
ruthless propaganda campaign smearing Jeremy Corbyn, a
passionate anti-racist. The campaign depicted
Corbyn, not just as an anti-semite, but as someone who might
‘reopen Auschwitz’. The truth wasn’t just distorted,
it was reversed. Israeli-born academic and author
Jamie Stern-Weiner has commented: ‘no
mainstream reporter ever investigated whether the
allegations against Labour were
true. ‘Where journalists
did not reflexively endorse the accusations against Labour,
they were content to uncritically relay them alongside the
party’s
response. ‘Accusations by
Jewish communal figures or anti-Corbyn MPs were considered
inherently significant, whether or not they were accompanied
by supporting evidence.’ Careful,
credible analysis that made a nonsense of the claims here,
here
and here
was simply ignored. Vested interests may appear to
hold all the cards – they work hard to give that
impression – but this is only an appearance. The very fact
that they work so relentlessly to shape public opinion
indicates the precarious nature of their
dominance. The problem is inherent, structural – a
‘democratic’ society that subordinates the needs of the
many to the needs of the few is a society based on lies.
Propaganda obfuscating those lies can be disseminated
endlessly, day and night, but it will always be vulnerable
to individuals and groups with genuine expertise motivated
by genuine concern for others. As the Buddhist sage Je
Gampopa commented: ‘Even a single
virtuous act overcomes many evils… a small good action can
overcome a great wrong; it is highly efficient.’ (Gampopa,
‘Gems of Dharma, Jewels of Freedom,’ Altea, 1994,
p.135) Following in the footsteps of
senior UN officials like Denis Halliday, Hans von Sponeck
and Scott Ritter – who, between them, demolished many of
the deceptions ‘justifying’ the genocidal 1990s US-UK
sanctions regime in Iraq and the 2003 war of aggression on
Iraq – consider the ‘highly efficient’ comments
made to the Swiss magazine, Republik, by Nils Melzer on
Julian Assange: ‘Four democratic
countries joined forces – the U.S., Ecuador, Sweden and
the UK – to leverage their power to portray one man as a
monster so that he could later be burned at the stake
without any outcry. The case is a huge scandal and
represents the failure of Western rule of law. If Julian
Assange is convicted, it will be a death sentence for
freedom of the press.’ The problem for
the propaganda system targeting Assange is that Melzer is
not just someone blogging on the internet; he is the UN
Special Rapporteur on Torture. In addition, he is a
professor of international law at the University of Glasgow
and holds the Human Rights Chair at the Geneva Academy of
International Humanitarian Law and Human Rights in
Switzerland, where he has been teaching since 2009,
including as the Swiss Chair of International Humanitarian
Law (2011–2013). Melzer even speaks fluent Swedish. In
other words, it is hard to imagine anyone better qualified
to comment on the Assange case. Melzer describes how,
on August 20, 2010, a headline appeared on the front page of
Expressen, a leading Swedish tabloid, declaring that Julian
Assange was suspected of having committed two rapes. Melzer
describes his reaction on investigating these
claims: ‘I speak fluent Swedish and was
thus able to read all of the original documents. I could
hardly believe my eyes: According to the testimony of the
woman in question, a rape had never even taken place at all.
And not only that: The woman’s testimony was later changed
by the Stockholm police without her involvement in order to
somehow make it sound like a possible rape. I have all the
documents in my possession, the emails, the text
messages.’ The order of events is
extraordinary and outrageous: ‘A woman
walks into a police station. She doesn’t want to file a
complaint but wants to demand an HIV test. The police then
decide that this could be a case of rape and a matter for
public prosecutors. The woman refuses to go along with that
version of events and then goes home and writes a friend
that it wasn’t her intention, but the police want to
“get their hands on” Assange. Two hours later, the case
is in the newspaper. As we know today, public prosecutors
leaked it to the press – and they did so without even
inviting Assange to make a statement. And the second woman,
who had allegedly been raped according to the Aug. 20
headline, was only questioned on Aug.
21.’ As Melzer says, this behaviour
demonstrated the ‘willful malevolence of the
authorities’. Melzer leaves no doubt about the real
significance of the rape
claims: ‘Imagine a dark room. Suddenly,
someone shines a light on the elephant in the room – on
war criminals, on corruption. Assange is the man with the
spotlight. The governments are briefly in shock, but then
they turn the spotlight around with accusations of rape. It
is a classic maneuver when it comes to manipulating public
opinion. The elephant once again disappears into the
darkness, behind the spotlight. And Assange becomes the
focus of attention instead, and we start talking about
whether Assange is skateboarding in the embassy or whether
he is feeding his cat correctly.’ The
goal: ‘A show trial is to be used to
make an example of Julian Assange. The point is to
intimidate other journalists. Intimidation, by the way, is
one of the primary purposes for the use of torture around
the world. The message to all of us is: This is what will
happen to you if you emulate the Wikileaks
model.’ It is very much to Melzer’s
credit that he admits that he was himself initially taken in
by the propaganda campaign. He reveals that, in December
2018, he was asked by Assange’s lawyers to intervene. He
declined: ‘I was overloaded with other
petitions and wasn’t really familiar with the case. My
impression, largely influenced by the media, was also
colored by the prejudice that Julian Assange was somehow
guilty and that he wanted to manipulate
me.’ After Assange’s lawyers made a
second request in March 2019, Melzer felt that that ‘my
professional integrity demanded that I at least take a look
at the material’. The result: ‘It
quickly became clear to me that something was
wrong.’ With unprecedented clarity,
Melzer unpacks the meaning of the many bizarre twists and
turns in the political persecution of Assange. Was it true,
as so many journalists claim, that Assange sought asylum in
the Ecuadorian embassy to evade Swedish justice? Melzer
comments: ‘The [Assange] lawyers say
that during the nearly seven years in which Assange lived in
the Ecuadorian Embassy, they made over 30 offers to arrange
for Assange to visit Sweden – in exchange for a guarantee
that he would not be extradited to the U.S. The Swedes
declined to provide such a guarantee by arguing that the
U.S. had not made a formal request for
extradition.’ Was this standard
practice? ‘Such diplomatic assurances
are a routine international practice… I say this on the
strength of all of my experience behind the scenes of
standard international practice: If a country refuses to
provide such a diplomatic assurance, then all doubts about
the good intentions of the country in question are
justified. Why shouldn’t Sweden provide such assurances?
From a legal perspective, after all, the U.S. has absolutely
nothing to do with Swedish sex offense
proceedings.’ Melzer was asked if it
was normal, or legally acceptable, for Swedish authorities
to travel abroad for such an
interrogation: ‘For exactly these kinds
of judiciary issues, there is a cooperation treaty between
the United Kingdom and Sweden, which foresees that Swedish
officials can travel to the UK, or vice versa, to conduct
interrogations or that such questioning can take place via
video link. During the period of time in question, such
questioning between Sweden and England took place in 44
other cases. It was only in Julian Assange’s case that
Sweden insisted that it was essential for him to appear in
person.’ Melzer’s
conclusion: ‘From my perspective, Sweden
very clearly acted in bad faith. Had they acted in good
faith, there would have been no reason to refuse to answer
my questions. The same holds true for the British: Following
my visit to Assange in May 2019, they took six months to
answer me – in a single-page letter, which was primarily
limited to rejecting all accusations of torture and all
inconsistencies in the legal proceedings. If you’re going
to play games like that, then what’s the point of my
mandate? I am the Special Rapporteur on Torture for the
United Nations. I have a mandate to ask clear questions and
to demand answers.’ He
adds: ‘There is only a single
explanation for everything – for the refusal to grant
diplomatic assurances, for the refusal to question him in
London: They wanted to apprehend him so they could extradite
him to the U.S. The number of breaches of law that
accumulated in Sweden within just a few weeks during the
preliminary criminal investigation is simply
grotesque.’ The media version was
rather different. In 2012, the Guardian’s Laura Barton wrote
of Assange and the Ecuadorian
embassy: ‘Poor Julian. It can’t be
easy to be confined to one building, no matter how
prestigious the postcode… And so we decided to assemble a
collection of items that Assange might be missing, and
deliver them.’ A photograph showed an
unsmiling Barton delivering a Guardian hamper to their bete
noire at the Ecuadorian embassy: ‘we
packed our hamper with a selection of edible items not
native to Ecuador – Kellogg’s cornflakes fortified with
vitamin D to compensate for the lack of sunlight in
Assange’s life, a jar of Vegemite (as an antipodean,
Julian was likely to spurn Marmite), a packet of
chocolate-chip cookies, and a punnet of
clementines. ‘Recalling
that Bill Keller, editor of the New York Times, once
remarked upon Assange’s questionable hygiene and the fact
he wore “filthy white socks” we added three pairs of
crisp, white sports socks and a shower gel in the
“feelgood fragrance of eucalyptus and citrus oils” that
promised to be both “revitalizing” and
“refreshing.”’ We have documented
many similar examples of this relentless, ferocious and
frankly weird corporate media mockery of Assange here
and here. Assange
is currently being held in London’s Belmarsh prison prior
to a hearing that will determine if he is to be extradited
to the US. He has already served a 50-week sentence for
skipping bail. Melzer comments on this
sentence: ‘It is obvious that what we
are dealing with here is political persecution. In Britain,
bail violations seldom lead to prison sentences – they are
generally subject only to fines. Assange, by contrast, was
sentenced in summary proceedings to 50 weeks in a
maximum-security prison – clearly a disproportionate
penalty that had only a single purpose: Holding Assange long
enough for the U.S. to prepare their espionage case against
him.’ A US grand jury has indicted
Assange on 18 charges – 17 of which fall under the US
Espionage Act – around conspiracy to receive, obtain and
disclose classified diplomatic and military documents.
Melzer explains why Assange has no chance of receiving
justice in the US: ‘He will not receive
a trial consistent with the rule of law. That’s another
reason why his extradition shouldn’t be allowed. Assange
will receive a trial-by-jury in Alexandria, Virginia – the
notorious “Espionage Court” where the U.S. tries all
national security cases. The choice of location is not by
coincidence, because the jury members must be chosen in
proportion to the local population, and 85 percent of
Alexandria residents work in the national security community
– at the CIA, the NSA, the Defense Department and the
State Department. When people are tried for harming national
security in front of a jury like that, the verdict is clear
from the very beginning. The cases are always tried in front
of the same judge behind closed doors and on the strength of
classified evidence. Nobody has ever been acquitted there in
a case like that. The result being that most defendants
reach a settlement, in which they admit to partial guilt so
as to receive a milder
sentence.’ Meanwhile, Assange’s
physical condition has continued to
deteriorate: ‘I visited Assange in his
cell in London in May 2019 together with two experienced,
widely respected doctors who are specialized in the forensic
and psychological examination of torture victims. The
diagnosis arrived at by the two doctors was clear: Julian
Assange displays the typical symptoms of psychological
torture. If he doesn’t receive protection soon, a rapid
deterioration of his health is likely, and death could be
one outcome.’ Melzer’s conclusions
are utterly damning: ‘We have to stop
believing that there was really an interest in leading an
investigation into a sexual offense. What Wikileaks did is a
threat to the political elite in the U.S., Britain, France
and Russia in equal measure. Wikileaks publishes secret
state information – they are opposed to classification.
And in a world, even in so-called mature democracies, where
secrecy has become rampant, that is seen as a fundamental
threat.’ He
adds: ‘We give countries power and
delegate it to governments – but in return, they must be
held accountable for how they exercise that power. If we
don’t demand that they be held accountable, we will lose
our rights sooner or later. Humans are not democratic by
their nature. Power corrupts if it is not monitored.
Corruption is the result if we do not insist that power be
monitored.’ His final thoughts are an
urgent warning to us all: ‘I have seen
lots of horrors and violence and have seen how quickly
peaceful countries like Yugoslavia or Rwanda can transform
into infernos. At the roots of such developments are always
a lack of transparency and unbridled political or economic
power combined with the naivete, indifference and
malleability of the population. Suddenly, that which always
happened to the other – unpunished torture, rape,
expulsion and murder – can just as easily happen to us or
our children. And nobody will care. I can promise you
that.’ We tweeted
the Guardian editor and a number of key Guardian journalists
who have commented on Assange: ‘For the
first time, the UN Special Rapporteur on Torture, Nils
Melzer, speaks in detail about the explosive findings of his
investigation into the case of Julian Assange. Please read
and comment @KathViner @MarinaHyde @suzanne_moore
@GeorgeMonbiot @HadleyFreeman
@OwenJones84’ We also tweeted: ‘As
@NilsMelzer says, a failure to respond to his findings
indicates a lack of good faith. Please respond @KathViner
@MarinaHyde @suzanne_moore @GeorgeMonbiot @HadleyFreeman
@OwenJones84’ We also wrote
to Ash Sarkar, contributing editor at Novara Media, who
described Assange on Twitter as ‘a definite creep, a
probable rapist, a conspiracist
whackjob’: ‘Hi @AyoCaesar, will you
please respond to these comments from @NilsMelzer, UN
Special Rapporteur on Torture, on attempts to portray Julian
Assange ‘as a monster so that he could later be burned at
the stake without any outcry’? @novaramedia
@AaronBastani’ We received no answer
from any of the journalists contacted (to be fair to Monbiot
and Jones, having blocked us on Twitter for sending them
polite, rational challenges, they may not have seen our
tweet). Despite the credibility and integrity of the
source, and the obvious newsworthiness of the issue, our
ProQuest database search finds that Nils Melzer and his
comments published in Republik on 31 January have not been
mentioned in any US or UK media
outlet.‘Burned At
The Stake’ - The UN Special Rapporteur on Torture
Demolishes The Fake Claims Targeting Julian
Assange