Last month, a key witness against Julian Assange admitted that his testimony was false. It's further proof that this case has little to do with justic

The Assange Case Is Collapsing – But it Remains a Travesty of Justice

submited by
Style Pass
2021-07-25 20:30:04

Last month, a key witness against Julian Assange admitted that his testimony was false. It's further proof that this case has little to do with justice – but is a persecution designed to silence critical journalists.

Julian Assange remains in prison in Britain, despite the recent judgement against his extradition to the US. (Credit: PA / Getty)

Watching the US government’s case against Julian Assange is like watching a levitation act at the music hall. You can see that the object floats, but you’ve no idea how. If normal gravitational laws applied, the Assange case would have crashed to the ground already.

After all, a leading prosecution witness has admitted lying in his evidence to the court and the defendant and his lawyers have been spied on by the intelligence agency of the government attempting to extradite him. In any other case, the mere facts of these revelations would be enough to halt court proceedings, but the detail makes the case for abandonment of the extradition even more compelling.

The most recent bombshell is that Sigurdur ‘Siggi’ Thordarson has admitted to Icelandic journalists at Stundin that he lied when he gave evidence alleging that Julian Assange had instructed him to hack US government accounts. Thordarson’s evidence is not marginal to the US case: it’s woven all through the prosecution’s argument, and it is specifically referred to by the judge in the Westminster Magistrates’ Court in those parts of her judgement which are hostile to Assange.

Leave a Comment