"That we, as doctors,
feel ethically compelled to hold governments to account on medical grounds
speaks volumes about the gravity of the medical, ethical, and human rights
travesties that are taking place."
Monday, December 16, 2019
A group of over 100 doctors on
Monday urged the Australian government to end its "refusal to act" in
the case of Julian Assange and insist the British government release the
WikiLeaks founder from prison so he can be safely sent to an Australian
hospital before "it is too late."
In an open
letter addressed to Foreign Minister Marise Payne, the doctors say
that "the most fundamental human rights of an Australian citizen are being
denied by the British government."
The international medical
experts, who hail from countries including the United States, Australia, and
the United Kingdom, called upon Payne to abide by his "undeniable legal
obligation to protect your citizen against the abuse of his fundamental human
rights, stemming from U.S. efforts to extradite Mr. Assange for journalism and
publishing that exposed U.S. war crimes."
Assange has been in London's
Belmarsh prison since April for skipping bail
seven years ago when he first took refuge at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London.
He's facing possible extradition to the United States for alleged violations of
the Espionage Act. His time at the embassy and at Belmarsh had led to
"medical neglect and fragile health," the doctors said, adding that
Assange continues to suffer psychological torture at the London jail.
It's not the first time the
medical group has sounded alarm on Assange's deteriorating health conditions.
In a letter sent last month to
British Home Secretary Priti Patel and Shadow Home Secretary Diane
Abbott, the group expressed "real
concerns, on the evidence currently available, that Mr. Assange could die in
prison." U.N. Special Rapporteur on Torture Nils Melzer has also accused
the U.K. government of "outright contempt for Mr. Assange's rights and
integrity." In May Melzer said Assange
exhibited "all symptoms typical for prolonged exposure to psychological
torture."
The doctors referenced Melzer's
concerns as well as their letter to the U.K. authorities, saying that document
fell on deaf ears.
In addendum to the new letter,
the doctors wrote that Assange is essentially stuck waiting "helplessly
for whatever the U.S government holds in store for him"—a situation
"akin to keeping someone bound and gagged while their assailant stands by
sharpening their knives."
"The Australian
government has shamefully been complicit by its refusal to act, over many
years. Should Mr. Assange die in a British prison, people will want to know
what you, Minister, did to prevent his death."
Ongoing detention at Belmarsh,
the group said, is "medically reckless at best and deliberately harmful at
worst."
"We therefore urge you to
insist upon the immediate transfer of Mr. Assange from Belmarsh Prison to an
Australian university teaching hospital, on urgent medical grounds, so that he
can receive the assessment and treatment that he requires," the doctors
wrote. They added:
That we, as doctors, feel
ethically compelled to hold governments to account on medical grounds speaks
volumes about the gravity of the medical, ethical, and human rights travesties
that are taking place. It is an extremely serious matter for an Australian
citizen's survival to be endangered by a foreign government obstructing his
human right to health. It is an even more serious matter for that citizen's own
government to refuse to intervene, against historical precedent and numerous
converging lines of medical advice.
Assange is set to face another
case management hearing this week Westminster Magistrates' Court and full
extradition hearing in February.
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