Connect with us

Hi, what are you looking for?

SecurityWeekSecurityWeek

Cybercrime

UN Rights Expert Urges Trump to Pardon Assange

A UN rights expert on Tuesday urged outgoing US President Donald Trump to pardon Julian Assange,

A UN rights expert on Tuesday urged outgoing US President Donald Trump to pardon Julian Assange, saying the WikiLeaks founder is not “an enemy of the American people”.

WikiLeaks “fights secrecy and corruption throughout the world and therefore acts in the public interest both of the American people and humanity as a whole,” Niels Melzer wrote in an open letter.

“In pardoning Mr Assange, Mr President, you would send a clear message of justice, truth and humanity to the American people and to the world,” said Melzer, the UN special rapporteur on torture.

“You would rehabilitate a courageous man who has suffered injustice, persecution and humilation for more than a decade, simply for telling the truth,” he added.

Assange, 49, is currently being held in the top-security Belmarsh jail in London awaiting a January 4 decision by a British judge on a US extradition request, in a case seen by his supporters as a cause celebre for media freedom.

The Australian publisher faces 18 charges in the United States relating to the 2010 release by WikiLeaks of 500,000 secret files detailing aspects of military campaigns in Afghanistan and Iraq.

Melzer has previously condemned the conditions at Belmarsh, saying the “progressively severe suffering inflicted” on Assange is tantamount to torture.

In his letter on Tuesday, Melzer wrote: “I visited Mr. Assange… with two independent medical doctors, and I can attest to the fact that his health has seriously deteriorated, to the point where his life is now in danger.”

Advertisement. Scroll to continue reading.

He noted that Assange suffers from a respiratory condition that makes him more vulnerable to Covid-19, which has infected several Belmarsh inmates.

Melzer said Assange “has not hacked or stolen any of the information he published (but) obtained it from authentic documents and sources in the same way as any other serious and independent investigative journalists conduct their work.”

“Prosecuting Mr. Assange for publishing true information about serious official misconduct, whether in America or elsewhere, would amount to ‘shooting the messenger’,” Melzer wrote.

First arrested 10 years ago on December 7, 2010, Assange could be jailed for up to 175 years if convicted.

Related: Trump ‘Offered Pardon’ to Assange If He Denied Russia Leak, Court Hears

Related: Julian Assange: Prolific Leaker of Secrets Back in Spotlight

Related: UK Judge Refuses Assange Lawyers’ Plea to Dismiss New US Allegations

Written By

AFP 2023

Click to comment

Trending

Daily Briefing Newsletter

Subscribe to the SecurityWeek Email Briefing to stay informed on the latest threats, trends, and technology, along with insightful columns from industry experts.

Join the session as we discuss the challenges and best practices for cybersecurity leaders managing cloud identities.

Register

SecurityWeek’s Ransomware Resilience and Recovery Summit helps businesses to plan, prepare, and recover from a ransomware incident.

Register

People on the Move

Cody Barrow has been appointed as CEO of threat intelligence company EclecticIQ.

Shay Mowlem has been named CMO of runtime and application security company Contrast Security.

Attack detection firm Vectra AI has appointed Jeff Reed to the newly created role of Chief Product Officer.

More People On The Move

Expert Insights

Related Content

Application Security

Cycode, a startup that provides solutions for protecting software source code, emerged from stealth mode on Tuesday with $4.6 million in seed funding.

Cybercrime

A recently disclosed vBulletin vulnerability, which had a zero-day status for roughly two days last week, was exploited in a hacker attack targeting the...

Cybercrime

The changing nature of what we still generally call ransomware will continue through 2023, driven by three primary conditions.

Cybercrime

As it evolves, web3 will contain and increase all the security issues of web2 – and perhaps add a few more.

CISO Strategy

SecurityWeek spoke with more than 300 cybersecurity experts to see what is bubbling beneath the surface, and examine how those evolving threats will present...

Cybercrime

Luxury retailer Neiman Marcus Group informed some customers last week that their online accounts had been breached by hackers.

CISO Conversations

Joanna Burkey, CISO at HP, and Kevin Cross, CISO at Dell, discuss how the role of a CISO is different for a multinational corporation...