Mr Rudd: Protect Assange!


This is an open letter to Foreign Minister Kevin Rudd and Attorney-General Nicola Roxon. It calls on the Australian government to take steps to ensure Julian Assange’s human rights are protected. It will be delivered on 19 December 2011, but we encourage members of the public to sign the letter below by adding their full name in the comments section, together with any comment they may wish to make. Please feel free to spread the word about the letter to others who may be interested.

Bernard Keane and Elizabeth O’Shea

The Hon Kevin Rudd
Minister for Foreign Affairs
Parliament House ACT 2600

Dear Minister

We write to express our concern about the plight of Julian Assange.

To date, no charges have been laid against Mr Assange by Swedish authorities. Nonetheless, we understand that should he be sent to Sweden, he will be held on remand, incommunicado. We note your comments last year about the need for Mr Assange to receive appropriate consular support. We trust that this consular support is being provided and will continue.

We are concerned that should Mr Assange be placed in Swedish custody, he will be subject to the process of “temporary surrender”, enabling his removal to the United States without the appropriate legal processes that accompany normal extradition cases. We urge you to convey to the Swedish government Australia’s expectation that Mr Assange will be provided with the same rights of appeal and review that any standard extradition request would entail.

Any prosecution of Mr Assange in the United States will be on the basis of his activities as a journalist and editor (Mr Assange’s status as such has been recently confirmed by the High Court in England). Such a prosecution will be a serious assault on freedom of speech and the need for an unfettered, independent media.

Further, the chances of Mr Assange receiving a fair trial in the United States appear remote. A number of prominent political figures have called for him to be assassinated, and the Vice-President has called him a “high-tech terrorist”. Given the atmosphere of hostility in relation to Mr Assange, we hold serious concerns about his safety once in US custody. We note that Mr Assange is an Australian citizen, whose journalistic activities were undertaken entirely outside of US territory.

Mr Assange is entitled to the best endeavours of his government to ensure he is treated fairly. He is entitled to expect that his government will not remain silent while his liberty and safety are placed at risk by a government embarrassed by his journalism. Australians also expect that their government will speak out against efforts to silence the media and intimidate those who wish to hold governments to account.

We ask that you convey clearly to the United States government Australia’s concerns about any effort to manufacture charges against Mr Assange, or to use an unrelated criminal investigation as the basis for what may effectively be rendition. We also urge the government to publicly affirm that Mr Assange is welcome to return to Australia once proceedings against him in Sweden are concluded, and that the government will fully protect his rights as an Australian citizen once here.

We have copied this letter to your colleague, the Attorney-General.

Yours sincerely

Phillip Adams AO
Adam Bandt MP
Wendy Bacon
Greg Barns
Susan Benn
Senator Bob Brown
Dr Scott Burchill
Julian Burnside QC
Dr Leslie Cannold
Mike Carlton
Professor Noam Chomsky
David Collins
Lieutenant Colonel (ret) Lance Collins, Australian Intelligence Corps
Eva Cox
Sophie Cunningham
Roy David
Andrew Denton
Senator Richard Di Natale
Peter Fitzsimons
Rt Hon Malcolm Fraser AC CH
Anna Funder
Professor Raimond Gaita
David Gilmour and Polly Samson
Kara Greiner
Senator Sarah Hanson-Young
Liz Humphrys
Barry Owen Jones AO
Professor Sarah Joseph
Bernard Keane
Professor John Keane
Stephen Keim SC
Steve Killelea
Andrew Knight
Mary Kostakidis
Professor Theo van Leeuwen
Ken Loach
Antony Loewenstein
Senator Scott Ludlam
Associate Professor Jake Lynch
Professor Robert Manne
Dr Ken Macnab
David Lyle
Alex Miller
Senator Christine Milne
Alex Mitchell
Reg Mombassa
Gordon Morris
Jane Morris
Julian Morrow
The Hon Alastair Nicholson AO RFD QC
Nicolé Nolan
Rebecca O’Brien
Elizabeth O’Shea
Michael Pearce SC
John Pilger
Justin Randle
Senator Lee Rhiannon
Guy Rundle
Angus Sampson
Senator Rachel Siewert
Marius Smith
Jeff Sparrow
Professor Stuart Rees AM
Rob Stary
Stephen Thompson
Dr Tad Tietze
Mike Unger
Dale Vince
Brian Walters SC
Rachel Ward
Senator Larissa Waters
Tracy Worcester, Marchioness of Worcester
Senator Penny Wright
Prof Spencer Zifcak

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  1. There are fundamental principles at stake here, and we must not join this absurd witchhunt.

  2. The David Hicks affair disgraced the government of Australia and all of its people. For God’s sake don’t let it happen again.

  3. I would like to add my name to this letter. As a United States citizen, I feel sad that I have to ask the Foreign Affairs Minister and Attorney General of Australia to protect one of their citizens from the actions of my own government.

    Holly Tannen, MA (Folklore/Anthropology, University of California Berkeley)

  4. I fully endorse the contents of this letter, and wish to associate myself with calls to our government to assist Mr Assange.

  5. Whatever his personal faults and mistakes may or may not be, Julian Assange is an authentic Australian hero and an Australian citizen, and he should be given all the protection that this government is capable of providing for him.

  6. If our extravagantly paid, self-proclaimed “public servants” in Parliament cannot be trusted to support and protect the fundamental human rights of Australian citizens abroad, then they do not deserve our support.

    Any Australian politician who does not act publicly and vocally in support of the rights of Mr Assange, should be blacklisted, and voted OUT at the next election for this reason alone.

  7. I fully support this letter and ask the Australian Government to speak out for Julian Assange, especially as he has not broken any Australian law. Please add my name to this letter.

  8. I fully support this letter. Please add my name to it. Its time we acted as a sovereign and independent nation that has the decency and integrity to support the rights of free speech over above our tawdry alliances built on the shifting sands of compromises based on economic & trade agendas.

  9. I give my full support being a artist i know the importance of freedom to express and freedom to speech. I wanna know what kind of world they want us to live in?

  10. This is a sorry, sorry business. Julian Assange has my full support as a fellow Australian.

  11. I fulluy support the sentiments expressed here. Our government must do its duty and protect Australian citizen Julian Assange. Please add my name to the list.

  12. As someone appalled by the treatment of Pvt. Bradley Manning–18 months of harsh solitary confinement before any trial–and by the new law that gives the US military discretion to imprison indefinitely without trial any person the US military suspects of “terrorism,” I urge you not to extradite Mr. Assange to the United States. He will not receive here anything resembling justice.

  13. If Australia doesn’t protect Assange then Australia has lost all credibility as a sovereign nation and should just adopt the american flag and admit its status as the 51st state of the USA. What a tragedy that would be.

  14. Assange’s crime has been to ignore the rules of protocol, to publicise what everyone suspects but which is deemed too secret for the public. Has anyone been harmed? Assange deserves our full support.

  15. I believe in freedom of information and freedom of expression. We will not be denied our human right to know or to speak.

  16. I fully support the sentiments and arguments put forward in this letter. Please add me to the list of those seeking justice for Australian citizen Julian Assange.

  17. I will be grateful to be counted as one, and have my signature here; So my name can also be on the list.

  18. Julian must not be extradited to the US and should be given support to return to Australia. The US’ history with renditions and military tribunals means that there is no way he would, as a non US citizen be charged, and would likely remain indefinitely in detention as we see in Guantanamo Bay.
    As a publisher of whistleblower’s material, he has not committed a crime in our country.

  19. I fully support this letter and anyone from govt who will stand up to protect it’s citizen.

  20. Mr Rudd, Do Not allow Julian Assange to be treated like David Hicks or Mamdouh Habib. He is an Australian citizen and should be protected and his rights to a fair and open trial should be insisted upon by our government.

  21. The plight of Julian Assange is highly symptomatic and hugely symbolic of the current status of civil rights for all citizens of Australia and the developed world.
    I unreservedly and passionately support this letter and proudly so.

  22. Vietnam, Iraq… why don’t we officially become the 51st state? At least that way we could get the opportunity to vote and not just be a completely silent partner lap dog.

    Julian Assange, David Hicks. Will neither of our political parties stand up for principle?

  23. I too fully support this letter and the factual information herein. Please do not shame Australia in this way Mr Rudd. Mr. Assange’s treatment indicated by the United States and followed by the Australian Government (as well as Sweden amongst others..) is a deep offence to Australian (as well as other) citizen’s worldwide. The response to mere allegations by worldwide Governments; INTERPOL and the lack of support by Government Human Rights administrations in Australia has been nothing short of atrociously deplorable, and were any other citizen of Australia, would never been condoned by these very offices. People who have been convicted of heroin distribution have received more protection than this man. A great injustice. As witness to the treatment of this man, I am ashamed to call myself an Australian citizen. This, coming from the “second greatest country” according to the United Nations. We implore you to protect this man and not bear the brunt of the worldwide public outcry that will unleash. In good faith, we all trust you are aware that the great majority of the Australian population is in full support of Mr. Assange. We thank you for your attention to this matter of paramount importance and the faith that we entrust to the people who are the “voice of Australia”. May our country restore its great reputation.

  24. Australia must demand justice for Assange to erase the memory of injustice served to Hicks and Habib. Please add my name as endorsement.

  25. I fully support this letter. It is time our government stood up not only for the rights of it’s own citizens but also for the principles to which it supposedly adheres.

  26. Please add my name to this list. I expect the Australian government to protect and support its citizens abroad and to do all in its power diplomatically and legally to assist Julian Assange.

  27. I fully support Julian Assange’s right to return to Australia and he should be afforded the full range of legal protections that are available to every Australian citizen.

  28. I fully support this letter, the Australian government should protect Assange, what he did was not criminal,but made everyone more aware of what is going on!

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