Andrew Wilkie speaks outside Belmarsh prison (Image: Victoria Jones/PA Wire)
“Today’s 90 minute visit to Julian Assange in London’s Belmarsh Prison was an alarming experience. The place is everything you’d expect of a supermax jail and the process of entering and departing was security on steroids. Just the place for a supervillain.
Once inside we waited. And waited. And waited.
Despite the half hour it took us to be processed on entry, and me being ejected temporarily because I had a small hole in the bottom of one of my suit pockets, and the fact that all the other prisoners had already been allowed into the cavernous visitors area, Julian Assange was nowhere to be seen.
But then, finally, there he was, the last prisoner to see any visitor.
Clearly the special one. No wonder he looked tired, a man under enormous pressure, not just from years of incarceration, but also for the chilling prospect of being sent to a US federal prison for the rest of his life.
The injustice in all this is profound.
Sure, people have all sorts of views about Julian Assange. But when push comes to shove none of that is relevant. The substantive matter is that Julian Assange publicised US misconduct and presented hard evidence of their war crimes.
Because at the end of the day no one should be punished for doing the right thing.”
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eric.m
5 years ago
Quite clearly the government has a low threshold of tolerance for whistleblowers who reveal state malfeasance and it seems not to matter that the revelation concerned the USA rather than Australia.
Assange appears not to have broken any Australian law but that doesn’t matter either. Remember David Hicks, he also broke no Australian law. What does seem to matter is not the law but rather the opinions of our political overlords; they won’t help you unless they like you.
I am not a student of international law and have to assume that the extradition proceedings are legally justified in the UK. It seems odd however that the USA has jurisdiction over acts committed in other countries without the accused having set foot inside the USA.
Julian Assange is a part of the free trade of people deemed too difficult to silence. Most, if not all, trade for one purpose only; “what’s in it for me?”.
I despair, thinking what has become of us as humans, when we continue to allow this to happen.
Thank you so much Andrew for doing what you can to help Julian Assange.
Massive congrats to Andrew Wilkie …. and…gulp, George Christensen (HELL!) Wilkie consistently does and says what reasonable Aussies with a sense of fair play want.
Our Govt used to look after its citizens when they were legally snagged overseas. Since Howards snivelling kowtowing to the US over David Hicks, the LNP has careered downwards on offering any Oz citizen protections.
Good on Wilkie for doing what was always seen as the right thing – protecting Oz citizens from political entrapment overseas.
k.casablanca57@gmail.com
5 years ago
Hi,I am very happy that Andrew is doing this I have been following Julian Assange for a number of years now,I cannot understand why it has come to this/remember how President Nixson was found out.
MJM
5 years ago
Respect for Andrew Wilkie. He really behaves as I would expect our elected representatives to do. How rare is he?
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My prison visit with Julian Assange, by Andrew Wilkie
Quite clearly the government has a low threshold of tolerance for whistleblowers who reveal state malfeasance and it seems not to matter that the revelation concerned the USA rather than Australia.
Assange appears not to have broken any Australian law but that doesn’t matter either. Remember David Hicks, he also broke no Australian law. What does seem to matter is not the law but rather the opinions of our political overlords; they won’t help you unless they like you.
I am not a student of international law and have to assume that the extradition proceedings are legally justified in the UK. It seems odd however that the USA has jurisdiction over acts committed in other countries without the accused having set foot inside the USA.
It’s called being a vassal state.
Julian Assange is a part of the free trade of people deemed too difficult to silence. Most, if not all, trade for one purpose only; “what’s in it for me?”.
I despair, thinking what has become of us as humans, when we continue to allow this to happen.
Thank you so much Andrew for doing what you can to help Julian Assange.
Massive congrats to Andrew Wilkie …. and…gulp, George Christensen (HELL!) Wilkie consistently does and says what reasonable Aussies with a sense of fair play want.
Our Govt used to look after its citizens when they were legally snagged overseas. Since Howards snivelling kowtowing to the US over David Hicks, the LNP has careered downwards on offering any Oz citizen protections.
Good on Wilkie for doing what was always seen as the right thing – protecting Oz citizens from political entrapment overseas.
Hi,I am very happy that Andrew is doing this I have been following Julian Assange for a number of years now,I cannot understand why it has come to this/remember how President Nixson was found out.
Respect for Andrew Wilkie. He really behaves as I would expect our elected representatives to do. How rare is he?