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RC3-Music
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Herald: So here with us, Stefania Maurizi
from Il Fatto Quotidian, she's an
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investigative journalist, and Nils Melzer,
who's the UN special rapporteur on
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torture, and they are here tonight to
dissect the Julian Assange and WikiLeaks
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case. And so, the stage is yours.
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Nils Melzer: Yes, thank you.
Stefania Maurizi: Absolutely, we are very
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lucky to have the UN special rapporteur on
torture Nils Melzer tonight, so we have
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many questions that I expect. Question for
you, and I hope you will have many
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questions for us as well. So let's start
Nils, about this case because I suppose
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you have hundreds of cases every year. And
why do you focus on these with many cases
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dealt with serious torture and all sorts
of serious human rights violations?
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Nils: Well, thanks Stefania, for the
question because I think that's what many
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people ask themselves. You know, how are
you focusing on a person who's locked up
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or was locked up at the time in an embassy
with a cat and a skateboard? How can it be
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torture, right? And to be honest with you,
that's what I thought, in the beginning
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because you're right, I received 10 to 15
requests of individuals, either by the
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victims themselves, that have been
tortured, or are exposed to the risk of
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torture, or their lawyers or family
members or NGOs. So, I get about 15 cases
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per day on my desk and I can do maybe one.
So, I really have to choose quite quickly.
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And I remember I was writing up a report
for the United Nations in December 2018,
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so that I would have been actually three
years ago, and I had this little message
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coming up on my screen saying Julian
Assange's lawyers are asking for your
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protection. And I immediately have this
emotional reaction of, Oh no, not this
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one. Isn't this, this hacker and rapist
and, you know, traitor? And I'm not going
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to be manipulated by this guy. And so, I
swept it off my screen and I continued
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working on my report, and it took me three
months until I, actually ... I got
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contacted again by his lawyers in March
2019, about the month before he was
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expelled from the embassy. And they sent
me some medical reports from an
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independent doctor, a US doctor, who was
specialized in examining torture victims,
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who had visited Guantánamo and so on, and
she had visited him in the embassy, not as
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an Assange activist at all. And she and
she came to the conclusion, in that
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medical opinion, that the Convention
against Torture was being violated, that
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his living conditions were inhumane. And I
thought that if a person like this comes
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to that conclusion, I probably better have
a look at this case and feel
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Stefania: sorry for you. Let's name her
because she's very authoritative.
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Nils: Yeah, it is Dr. Sandra Crosby is her
name. So, she's one of the first doctors
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... independent doctors ... who visited
Guantánamo and really someone who is very
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highly regarded, and impartial. So, I
looked at this, but I also received some
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other evidence. And you know, Stefania,
you have a very important role in making
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that available through your Freedom of
Information litigation, where you received
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the release of some of the email
correspondence between the Swedish
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Prosecution Service and the UK Prosecution
Service. Because at the base of the
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Assange case in the beginning was these
allegations of rape in Sweden and so on.
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And this correspondence really cast some
doubt on the legitimacy of this
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prosecution, which I had never doubted
before. And so, I started realizing
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that I had a lot of prejudice against
Assange, but I didn't really know what the
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evidence was. And the more I looked into
this case, the more I saw that it doesn't
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hold up. There is really no evidence for
this narrative. And I decided, well, I
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think there's something wrong here. I
can't rely on the governments. I can't
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rely on what I find on the internet, just
like this. And so, I really have to go and
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look at this case myself and have decided
to visit Julian Assange in London. I asked
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for permission to visit him in the
embassy. And as soon as I asked for
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permission three days later they expel
him, I might have sped it up. Also, I
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fear, although we know today that this
expulsion had been planned for months
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before, but all of a sudden, everything
went really, really fast. They expelled
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him, and he was arrested by the British
and put in a high security prison in
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Belmarsh in London, where I visited him
about three weeks ... four weeks later on
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the 9th of May 2019 with two specialized
doctors. I didn't expect to find torture,
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to be quite honest with you. I expected to
find a man who is, you know, a bit
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stressed, who is in bad health because
he's been in a room in the embassy for six
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years and more. And that, he needed some
medical treatments. I would make some
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recommendations, and I was sure we are in
Britain now. You know, he's in British
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hands. This is a rule of law country.
There's going to be due-process. They're
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not going to extradite him to the US, and
it's fine. But then what I realized is how
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the authorities reacted to my comments and
to my requests is that they didn't want to
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engage in a discussion on this case. They
didn't want to listen to my assessment.
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And both of the doctors that I took with
me are very specialized people. One is the
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psychiatrist, the other is the former
president of the World Forensic Society. I
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mean, he is a very established forensic
doctor. They've been examining torture
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victims for 30 years, and both of them,
independently from each other, came to the
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conclusion that Julian Assange showed all
the symptoms that are typical for a victim
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of psychological torture and psychological
torture is not some kind of a light form
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of torture. It is really extremely grave
destabilization of the identity through
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isolation, constant threat, constant
stress, constant also confusion through
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arbitrariness and the defamation,
humiliation. All these elements together
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are deliberately employed to destroy a
person's stability and identity, and we
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could actually measure neurological damage
on Julian Assange already and cognitive
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impairments that would, due to that
constant stress and harassment that he was
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exposed to in the embassy already and has
been exposed to since then. So, we came to
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a clear assessment. This person has been
tortured, and when I confronted the
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authorities with this, they basically shut
down. They didn't want to engage with me
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in a discussion. And the same happened
with Sweden because Sweden had contributed
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to this, and Ecuador and the US, all of
these countries basically refused to
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engage in a dialog with me on this. And
now I have to point out I'm mandated by
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states. I mean, I am the UN special
rapporteur on torture. I'm not an NGO
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person. I'm not an activist, I am not a
journalist, and I am not belittling that.
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I think that all of this is very
important. But when you talk to states, as
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someone who's been appointed by states to
do exactly that, to transmit allegations
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of torture to them, you would expect them
to at least engage in a dialog. But they
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refused. And when I saw that, I was sure
now something's wrong here, and I started
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really investigating this case. I looked
deeply into the Swedish case. I looked
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into the US case, where we saw that the
US is accusing Assange of espionage. And
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I really started digging into this case.
And the more I did, the more dirt came
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out, and not on the side of Assange, but
on the side of the governments. And that's
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really a long answer to your first
question, why did I take on this case?
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Because I felt well, if we have a case of
torture in a rule-of-law, western
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democracy like Sweden and Britain, and as
the United Nations rapporteur, I cannot if
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I have evidence for this, and I went there
with two specialized doctors to look at
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this. I mean, it's consolidated. I, you
know, by law they have an obligation now
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to investigate this and to, you know, to
compensate him and prosecute those who are
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culpable and so on. There is no
discussion. But if democracies can afford
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to simply ignore this, well, what does
this mean for our society? And that was
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the first thing. And the second thought
was, and by the way, what does this mean
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for press freedom? You know, what does
this mean And I've never been a press
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freedom specialist. But, I thought, well,
here we have a person who is being
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persecuted for the fact that he has
disclosed, not even stolen, but he's
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received and disclosed, published true
information that proved serious crimes for
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government officials, torture, murder, I
mean, horrible stuff. I mean, very serious
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crimes. If this becomes a crime, to bring
the evidence for other crimes, and we see
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that those criminals are not being
prosecuted. But the witness, basically,
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who informs the public, is being
prosecuted and threatened with one hundred
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and seventy-five years in prison. What
does this mean for people like you,
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Stefania? You know, who are the
investigative journalists, and if people
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like you no longer can work... What does
this mean for all the rest of us in
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society? What does it mean? Do we have a
right to know what the governments are
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doing with the power that we give to them
in a democracy, with the tax money we pay
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to them? Or does it become a crime if we
ask the wrong questions? I mean, this is
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really, that's why this is so important.
Assange isn't as important as any other
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victim of torture. You know, they're all
the same. But the case is a precedent case
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that is of enormous importance for the
functionality of democracy and the rule of
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law.
Stefania: Absolutely. Absolutely. You have
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a book which is coming out in February and
during the investigation on the case, I
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was really impressed by the chapter on
collateral murder, your analysis of the
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brutal attack on civilians. And you
analyze it from your point of view as an
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expert on human rights law. I would like
to ask you to do a quick analysis for our
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public, to explain where the war crimes
are involved. What are your conclusions
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and so on.
Nils: Right? OK, I'll quickly show the
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book just so people can see it. So, it
comes out in February, and it's true that,
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you know, in the beginning, I explain my
own role, obviously the role of WikiLeaks.
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But this collateral murder video was a
very important publication. The first big
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publication of WikiLeaks is this video,
that was recorded by an attack helicopter
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in Iraq, a US attack helicopter. It's a
standard, you know, a tele-lens camera,
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and it shows how... How those helicopters
are circling over Baghdad, and we see
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people walking in the streets, and then
you can hear the radio communication, and
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the helicopters basically report that we
have, you know, several people with
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AK-47s, which is a form of an automatic
rifle, a Kalashnikov. And they ask for
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permission to fire and then put on the
image. We cannot see armed people, really.
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In the beginning, to admit the truth, we
can see two people in a group of about 20
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who might be carrying a weapon. But then
also, we have to know that at the time, in
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2007, when this was recorded in Iraq, in
Baghdad, the US occupying forces had
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authorized the Iraqi population to own
kalashnikovs and to carry them, you know,
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to keep them at home, especially to
protect themselves from the looting.
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Because when after the invasion of the
British and the US, the rule of law broke
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down in Iraq, and they needed people to be
able to defend themselves. So, they were
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actually allowed to carry that type of
weapon. And so, they (the helicopter gun-
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ship) received permission to fire. And
then what we can see is that a group of
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about 10 people is just being massacred.
They are in civilian clothing, they are
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walking relaxed on the street. So, they're
clearly not preparing any attack or
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something. We know that there is some,
some US soldiers from the of radio
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communication. We can tell that there is
some US soldiers on the ground somewhere
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close to there, but nobody is preparing an
attack. You know, and so we see how these
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10 people are being massacred. And then we
hear those nasty comments by soldiers
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like, you know, "good shooting" and "you
see these bloody bastards" and these types
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of remarks. But the most troubling thing
is that then we have the helicopter makes
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a couple of circles, and they report what
they see on the ground, all the dead
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bodies and then some of the wounded people
who are crawling around and from the
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conversations, we understand that the
soldiers know that it's prohibited to
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attack wounded people. And I want to, you
know, I've been a law of armed conflict
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expert on the use of force for the
International Committee of the Red Cross.
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I've been teaching this at university
level for more than 10 years.I have
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analyzed hundreds of combat operations as
an expert. So, I can easily see that these
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soldiers are aware that they cannot
lawfully attack those wounded people and
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that also in the law of war, you cannot
attack people who rescue the wounded as
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long as they're not fighting themselves.
And then we see a minibus coming with
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civilians trying to rescue this man. And
this man we're talking about is a wounded
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journalist, is a Reuters journalist, who
was wounded in that attack. And the
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soldiers, the US soldiers asked for
permission to fire on these people, and
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they received permission. And then they
basically. You know, massacre, the wounded
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person and the rescuers with the machine
gun and there is even in the minibus, the
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two children of the driver that are
gravely wounded. So, I mean, all of this,
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this is a clear war crime. When you
deliberately attack a wounded person who's
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no longer participating in fighting or
rescue personnel, that's only trying to
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rescue someone, that is, without any
question, a war crime. In the first scene,
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I think we have to be fair that these
helicopters are circling at about one and
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a half miles distance. The video we see is
recorded by a tele-objective lens. So, the
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soldiers are not that close. When they
look out of the window, they cannot see
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any details. It is too far away. So, they
have to rely exclusively on that picture.
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And you also have to be fair that they can
see this picture only once in real time,
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and they have to decide immediately. They
cannot, like us, rewind it 100 times and
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watch it again from the armchair. So, all
of this being said, though, you know the
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first attack, I think in the best case,
it's a very sloppy mistake. And I don't,
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you know, I think it's already this
crosses the line to a war crime, but this
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would be for a court to decide. But the
second attack, where they attack a clearly
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wounded person and from the conversations
we know that the soldiers know that, you
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know, they say, OK, he's wounded, and then
they're saying, you know, someone is
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coming to pick them up and picking up the
weapons can we fire? The law of war is
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very clear. This is absolutely prohibited
and what happened there is a clear war
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crime and the scandal is that everybody
knows that the soldiers knew that. I mean,
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the Department of Defense in the US knew
that, the US government knew that, the
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public knows it. I mean, it's obvious when
you watched the film, but it's, and we
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have video evidence, ... but nobody has
ever been prosecuted for that. That's the
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first scandal. The second scandal..
Stefania: Let me help you. Why no one has
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prosecuted. Why there was no International
Criminal Court investigation. Nothing.
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Nils: Well because, the US is not party to
the ICC treaty. Of course, they have not,
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.... You know, they have made sure that no
one can prosecute them for war crimes. And
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also now, legally, any country in the
world could, and not even could, but would
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have to prosecute these people as soon as
they are on their territory because war
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crimes are so-called universal
jurisdiction crimes, which means if I
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commit a war crime anywhere in the world,
no matter what nationality I am, no matter
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where I am, the country where I am has to
arrest me and to prosecute me or to
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extradite me to a country that will
prosecute me. That's what the Geneva
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Conventions say. That's what the
International Criminal Law says and not
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only the ICC treaty, but actually even the
Geneva Conventions that the US has
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ratified. So, but what the reason is clear
is a political reason because no one dares
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to prosecute a US soldier. If the US
doesn't do it. Now, to me, the most
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troubling thing is that the US doesn't
do it because it's in their interest to
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prosecute people who violate the law of
war. Because we know that the discipline
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in an army diminishes very quickly when
you tolerate people committing war crimes.
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And so, it's very, very important for, and
even for just the hygiene of the armed
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forces, that they prosecute these things.
Now, not to say, you know, that the
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humanitarian reasons and the human rights
of these people who have been murdered and
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their families that don't receive
compensation, and then it also means that
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these types of operations proliferate. You
know, if you don't stop it like this, this
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becomes the normal modus operandi. And
that's exactly what many veterans of the
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Iraq War have said, that this is not
collateral. Murder is not an exception.
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This was the standard procedure. This
happened every day, in that period. And
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so, that's really a major scandal. But you
know, the second thing I want to say is
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the even bigger scandal is some people are
being prosecuted. And that's the
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whistleblower that actually leaked this
information and the journalists who
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published it. So, that is really turning
the world of justice upside down when
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murderers are walking free and the
witness, you know, who witnessed the
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murder or brings the (...). He would get
one hundred and seventy-five years in
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prison. That's enormous. That's a bit, ...
that's more than any war criminal in The
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Hague has ever received. That's what we're
looking at, and, you know, when you were
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asking, well, you know what, what is
Assange actually being accused of? When
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you look at the indictment, it's all about
receiving this type of information and
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publishing this type of information.
That's what I mean, you tell me, but
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that's what an investigative journalist
does. No?
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Stefania: Politically, absolutely. This is
what we do on a regular, ... on a daily
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basis.
Nils: Yeah. And so now, if I ask you an
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honest question, Stefania, if I gave you
today a USB stick with "Collateral Murder
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Video #2", and another 250,000 diplomatic
cables, would you publish them? I mean, 10
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years ago, you probably would have.
Because at the time, even the New York
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Times, The Guardian and the Spiegel and Le
Monde and everybody, you know, wanted to
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co-publish this together with Assange. But
today? They're not even, they're not even
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really reporting on what's happening here.
And, you know, if I ask you, do you feel
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intimidated by what's happening to
Assange? Would you feel comfortable
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publishing these things today?
Stefania: I do feel really intimidated.
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Nils: Yeah,
Stefania: I think I would approach this
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with serious, serious concern, ...
Nils: Yup,
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Stefania: of not being protected by
anything at the end of the day because I
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have seen, in the last 13 years which I
have been covering and together in this
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case, that Julian Assange and the
WikiLeaks journalists have tried
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everything. They have tried to use the
laws. They have tried to ask for asylum.
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They have tried to look for protection by
the media community. They have tried
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everything. And with the exception of the
UN authorities, the U.N. Special
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Rapporteur on Torture and the UN Working
Group on Arbitrary Detention, they have
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received no protection whatsoever. So, I
would be terrified, honestly.
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Nils: Yes. And I think this is the type of
question we have to ask ourselves. It's
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not about will Assange be extradited or
not. Yes, it's important, but it's already
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working. You see, the example has already
been set for the last 10 years. This man
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has not been free. He's been on the run
from a country that's accusing him for
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telling the truth about its crimes. That's
really what's happening here because
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nothing else that he's accused of has been
proven and that they've tried hard.
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They've invested millions in trying to
create the narrative. But everything else
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from rape to hacking to, you know,
treason, all these things. There's not
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that there's no proof whatsoever. So, all
of this is constructed to push him into a
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corner, but also to intimidate people like
you. And I think that's that's what we
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have to understand. That's the effect of
this. Yes, it's on Assange and his health
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and his person, and that's important for
the individual. But my point of this being
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a general, in the case of general
importance, is proven by your reaction.
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And you, I know, are one of the more
courageous investigative journalists, and
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you've been fighting, you know, the
secrecy for very long through your FOIA
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litigation that has been so valuable in
producing, you know, evidence. And we know
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that, you know, a lot of key evidence is
still being kept secret by these states.
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And so, that's what we're risking to lose,
this access to the truth that is so
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essential for democracy.
Stefania: Absolutely. Definitely. You
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know, we know that is precisely what they
want, and that's why we had to fight hard
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because it's about the society we want in
the free allowed to go out to the .... If
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we allowed them to go ahead with this
persecution, with this extradition, they
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will .... It will be the end of the press
freedom ..., it would be the end of
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investigative journalism and the right of
the public to know. it's not just about
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us, it's not just about the investigative
journalism. It's about the public's right
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to know. I mean, Nils: And I think it's
important, you know, I know, that to many
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people, this might sound alarmist. You
know, oh, this is exaggerated. Oh, come
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on, this is just Assange, and he's going
to be prosecuted and everything's going to
-
be fine. No, you know, when you look in
history, that's exactly how powerful
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states have behaved and dictators, and you
know, for creating dictatorships. You
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know, you take someone, and you destroy
their reputation. You accuse them of, you
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know, stupid things and or even serious
crimes, you know, but they cannot be
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proven. And you destroy their reputation.
And then when the whole public is
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convinced that, you know, this is a bad
guy. Then you set an example with "him".
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On press freedom, but nobody cares about
"him" because I think it's just him and
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nobody likes him because his reputation
has been destroyed. But the problem is the
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precedent case can be applied to anybody,
afterwards. And that's exactly what
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they're trying to do. And I think it's
very, very important that we are aware of
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this. It's not whether you like or dislike
Assange, it's whether you like or dislike
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the rights that he has and that you have
and that everybody else has, which is the
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right of freedom of expression. And that's
not just the freedom of expression is not
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just the right to say anything you want
and think anything you want, but also to
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receive that information that the public
has the rights under the freedom of
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expression, to hear and to read, and to
see the evidence of government misconduct.
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And that's what they're trying to
suppress. Now, if you say this is a
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conspiracy theory, look, it's very
obvious, the torture, the murder of
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civilians, of journalists or collateral
murder and other documents has been
-
proven. It's not something that the
government has said is not true. No, they
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have never, .... They have never claimed
that anything is not true that WikiLeaks
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has proven. So, actually by law, those
officials have to be prosecuted, and they
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should spend, you know, many years in
prison. Some of them. So, but they will
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say, but I received orders from up, and it
goes higher up the chain of responsibility
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doesn't end in the attack helicopter. It
ends somewhere in a government building,
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in a nice little office with or a big
office, rather with thick carpets. And
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that's what they're afraid of because the
commander is responsible for this. So,
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that's why they cut this, and they
intimidate everybody, and they
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criminalize. It's basically it's a re-
classified information, and if you publish
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it, you will be punished and re-classified
for reasons of national security. But
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that's not true. They're classifying it
for their own impunity. That's what they
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want to protect. And it's natural. You
know, if you accuse someone of murder in
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court, and you allow him to classify all
the evidence against him and to make it a
-
crime to disclose it, he will do it, for
sure. So let's be realistic, you know,
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governments are not good or bad. They're
just normal human beings. And if they make
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a mistake, they want to cover it up like
everybody else. So, that's the natural
-
behavior. That's why we really have to
insist on transparency for the powerful.
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You know, we have to insist on oversight
on the separation of power. We have to
-
insist that it be treated as a serious
crime to circumvent these checks and
-
balances because it threatens the very
core of our society, of our democracy and
-
of our civil liberties. And when you look
at the legal proceedings that Assange has
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been exposed to, I'm not going to bore you
with a lot of legal technicalities, but
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I've really investigated every single
legal proceeding from the Swedish
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accusations or, you know, allegations of
sexual misconduct where I was able to read
-
original documents because I do speak
Swedish, and you know, luckily I had all
-
those documents that you also got to hand
on it through the FOIA litigation. And I
-
don't know what happened between Assange
and these women. But what I do know is
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that the government in Sweden never cared
about that. They clearly from the
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beginning wanted to create a rape
narrative and maintain it and to avoid,
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you know, him getting a chance, a fair day
in court to actually deal with this. The
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narrative that he evaded these accusations
that he was hiding in the embassy because
-
of the sexual allegations is false. He
offered to come to Sweden. He wanted to
-
testify in this case, but he was afraid
that the Swedish would send him to the
-
US without a legal proceeding, as they
had done with other people before. And he
-
just wanted guarantees from them, and the
Swedish didn't want to give those
-
guarantees, which is really something that
I can tell from international experience.
-
That's a warning. If the country doesn't
want to give you those guarantees, you
-
better not go there.
Stefania: Yeah,
-
Nils: He was right not to go. And they
really abused those legal institutions to
-
keep him in limbo, you know, suspected of
rape, but unable to defend himself. And
-
so, his reputation suffered because of
that. And then he continued, obviously
-
with, you know, the economic pressures on
Ecuador once they had a new president,
-
Moreno. The US put Ecuador under pressure,
and we have written evidence of Congress
-
writing to the president of Ecuador,
saying, Look, we would be happy to support
-
you economically and to, you know, to help
you bring up a country that the country's
-
situation, the economic situation to
financially support you. But there is one,
-
not several, there's one problem, and
that's the situation of Assange. And we
-
need him to be handed over, so we can
start helping you. So, that, ... we have a
-
letter of October 2018 of US Congress to
President Moreno. And from then on, it was
-
clear and Moreno was working together with
the British and the US to expel him from
-
the embassy. So, that was done without any
rule of law proceeding. You know, he had
-
official asylum, and it was just taken
from him along with his nationality. He
-
had no right to access a court to have a
lawyer defending him. It was just from one
-
hour to the other. He was expelled, and
the UK behaved just the same way. When you
-
think the UK is the quintessential rule of
law country, which I can, you know, this
-
was my conviction as a professor in the UK
university. And then you see that we have
-
a judge who is insulting him publicly in a
court hearing where Assange had said
-
nothing, except I plead not guilty. And
then we have another judge who's in charge
-
for the first couple of months for the
extradition procedure and her husband had
-
been exposed by WikiLeaks. I mean, it's
there's a conflict of interest. It's just,
-
you know, even it's a perception of bias
that you cannot afford in a democracy. And
-
then we have, you know, him being put in a
high security prison. Although he's not
-
serving a sentence for two years, he's
been in Belmarsh. He's not serving a
-
sentence. He's just being held there in
extradition detention. And normally people
-
should be allowed to work and to be with
their family and maybe to have an ankle
-
bracelet. Or they think Assange's case
because he has sought asylum in the
-
Ecuadorian embassy before, maybe they put
him in house arrest like they did with
-
Pinochet. But you will never. There's no
legal basis to put someone in a high
-
security prison. They do this with him
because they want to silence him because
-
they want to intimidate you, journalists.
That's the reason. And you know, when you
-
see this happening...,
Stefania: Let me stop you and ask you
-
something very, very serious, like the CIA
attempt to kidnap or poisoning him, which
-
is, I mean, this received so little
consideration. If we, ... I mean, I was
-
really upset about realizing how lethal it
was, considering the legal process in the
-
UK.
Nils: Absolutely. We've had we've had
-
indicators before we thought that the
security company that was working for the
-
Ecuadorian Embassy to guard the Ecuadorian
Embassy, U.C. Global was actually behind
-
the back of the Ecuadorian government
cooperating with the CIA and, you know,
-
streaming video feeds from surveillance
cameras, from the embassy to the CIA 24-7.
-
But not only that, we also had indicators
before, former employees of that company
-
testifying in court that, you know, there
were assassination plans for, you know,
-
against Assange by the CIA. And this was
then confirmed also by this Yahoo
-
disclosure in September this year, where
more than 30 agents or former agents of
-
the CIA allegedly confirmed that there
were plans to kidnap or Assange to, you
-
know, disappear him into black sites or
even to assassinate him was considered at
-
least, but then found to be too dangerous.
But the plan was to poison him. Now, I
-
mean, I'll just take another case,
Navalny, right, that everybody knows, you
-
know, and says that, allegedly, the
Russian government tried to poison him.
-
Well, that's what we're talking about. But
you know, it's the same thing. It's just
-
that in Nawalny's case, and rightly so,
you know, everybody is is is protesting
-
and of the western governments are very
courageously, you know, imposing sanctions
-
and so on. But when the same thing is
being planned by the CIA against Assange,
-
nobody speaks out. And that's that's what
I found, this kind of hypocrisy that we
-
have in Western governments is just so
disappointing. It's scandalous because it
-
threatens the foundations of what our
societies are. And if someone has
-
committed a crime, yes, arrest and try
him, you know, bring the evidence or
-
acquit him. But that's that's the end of
the story. But they don't know what to
-
accuse him of because he hasn't committed
any crime. So, they invent these stupid
-
stories. You know, he's not feeding his
cat, and he's playing football in the
-
embassy and all these stupid headlines
that you see. I mean, the BBC, you know, I
-
mean, they're reporting on these types of
things, but they're they're not, you know,
-
considerate enough about their own
profession as journalists to report on
-
what's actually happening here, that this
is about criminalizing investigative
-
journalism. This should be really at the
heart of the mission of a BBC or a New
-
York Times to be very, very outspoken
about this. And I'm convinced that if the
-
mainstream media, the main outlets in the
Anglo-Saxon world, let's say the New York
-
Times, The Washington Post, The Guardian
and the BBC, if they together deliberately
-
launched an effort to condemn this
persecution on their front pages and the
-
main news hour, you know, for one week
straight. This would be finished because
-
the government has nothing in their hands
in terms of truth. All they can do is
-
orchestrate a secret trial in Alexandria,
an espionage court where they tape the
-
doors and lock the windows and nobody is
allowed to witness what's going on, and
-
then they condemn him for something and
sentence him to 175 years in prison. And
-
nobody, even the defense counsel, doesn't
have access to the evidence. I mean,
-
that's that's a show trial that's not a
rule of law proceeding. And I think the
-
societies in the West and around the
world, but they're talking about Western
-
democracies now. They deserve, you know,
governments and judiciaries that respect
-
those principles and respect the law. And
it's really very worrying. That's why I
-
put my whole professional weight and
personal credibility into this case
-
because I think this is about our rights,
it's about it's about the rights of our
-
children to know what their governments
are doing with the money and the power
-
that they give to the governments. And if
we allow it to become a crime to tell the
-
truth, we will be living in a tyranny
that's not exaggerated.
-
Stefania: Absolutely. I mean, we read this
about something we really care about. We
-
realized that this case is crucial, and we
cannot lose it. We absolutely don't want
-
to lose it. Nils, let me ask you one last
question, then we will ask for the public
-
asking question to ask. Well, this case is
about Julian Assange, of course, and it is
-
all about the WikiLeaks journalists
because they have at least (...), for now,
-
he's in prison, but they will be the next.
Let's mentioned Sarah Harrison, for
-
example, the former WikiLeaks section
editor, who flew to Hong Kong. (...) or
-
many, many others. Kristie Larson, Joseph
Farrell. I have the Freedom of Information
-
case in the UK, and it is about these
three WikiLeaks journalists former and
-
current WikiLeaks journalists. And
Scotland Yard, is doing whatever it can to
-
deny me access to these documents using
anti-terror laws again or for denying me
-
access to these documents. I have been
litigating this case about the WikiLeaks
-
journalists and Julian Assange for over
six years. So, what do you think is going
-
to happen in this case now? What's next?
Nils: Well, I think the first thing I want
-
is to finish this case. Set a precedent.
You know, with this man that most of the
-
public still somehow despises because they
have been deceived and poisoned by this
-
narrative that has been created about him.
But once this is done, clearly they will,
-
they will continue. This is not the end of
it. This is the beginning of a new era
-
where journalists will be prosecuted for
telling the truth about government
-
misconduct. Because then the precedent has
been set. And you know, it's very
-
important as we speak and as we observe
this case, all ready countries are
-
adapting their laws to this new future. We
see that in Australia, we see that in the
-
UK, where the Official Secrets Act is
being tightened. Basically, we see that,
-
well, the interpretation of the Espionage
Act in the US. Sweden has just passed a
-
law on foreign espionage where it becomes
a crime. Sweden used to be the safe haven
-
of press freedom, which is why Julian
Assange was in Sweden in the first place,
-
In 2010. We wanted to establish WikiLeaks
there because it was the safe haven for
-
press freedom. Sweden has passed a law
just two months ago by which from January
-
2023, it will be a crime in Sweden to
disclose classified information that does
-
not even threaten national security.
That's only prejudicial to the relations
-
of Sweden with a different country or an
international organization. I mean, it's
-
ridiculous. I mean, that's the standard is
so low. It's basically, though, the
-
diplomatic cables, something that's just
embarrassing before the relations of
-
Sweden with Austria, for example. You
know, I'm just taking by random example.
-
It's just embarrassing. That's sufficient.
It becomes a crime. So, what we have to
-
realize is this is, ... Now states are
building a system not only in the US, the
-
UK, the Anglo-Saxon world throughout, but
also even now, the allied countries are
-
building a system where it becomes a crime
to tell the truth. It's. Really high time
-
for us to ring the alarm bell and to stop
this, to insist that we have a right to
-
know.
Stefania: Absolutely. What do you expect
-
from the legal process in the UK? What do
you expect the next?
-
Nils: Well, unfortunately, I cannot expect
justice. I was hopeful. I mean, I am
-
pessimistically hopeful. If I can allow to
say that the High Court would refuse
-
extradition. But I sensed that exactly
what happened, was going to happen. I said
-
it before publicly, and it's happened
exactly as I presumed it would. I think
-
that the UK judiciary, unfortunately, is
unable to ensure respect for the law here
-
and that they will basically wave this
extradition through, and they will try
-
perhaps to extend this proceeding another
year or two. Because for the US, it's not
-
urgent for Assange to be extradited if he
dies in prison in the UK, all the better
-
for the US, so they don't have to deal
with it. What they want is to set the
-
precedent that everybody knows, including
yourselves, Stefania, that this is what's
-
going to happen to you if you ever mess
with our secrets, our dirty secrets. And
-
so, I don't know exactly what's going to
play out and how it's going to play out.
-
But in the big picture, these states have
not persecuted Assange for 10 years for
-
tens of millions of dollars to let him off
the hook any time soon. So, the only
-
chance he has, and that's the very real
chance, if public opinion changes and if
-
the main media organizations change their
view. As I said before, this is going to
-
be over. This is just like waking up from
a nightmare. It's going to be over. But if
-
they don't, we're in for a long nightmare.
Stefania: Thank you, Nils, let's open the
-
question from the public.
-
Herald: Yeah. There are More and more
questions coming up here. And let me start
-
by, ... one, that's more like the
beginning of the whole story as to what
-
exactly did you expect, or who do you
exactly expect to respond in the first
-
instance, when torture in UK is concerned?
Like before you send letters, you would
-
expect kind of a maybe a police showing up
or something like that. What would you
-
normally expect?
Nils: Well, if I receive allegations of
-
torture, I transmit them, I mean, the
first thing that happens, I look whether
-
they are credible. You know, if they are,
if they're not credible, obviously, I
-
will. I will. I will try to consolidate.
Maybe I will. My team will call the person
-
or organization that submitted the
information and try to consolidate it to
-
make sure that it is credible. It doesn't
have to be proven, but it has to be
-
credible. If that's the case, I will
transmit it to the government. And if it's
-
an urgent case, you know, if it's about
preventing torture, it's a historical case
-
that happened 15 years ago, and we're just
investigating it's not very urgent, and we
-
can take time. I mean, you know,
reasonable timeframe. But if it's very
-
urgent, someone is about to be executed or
transferred or extradited. Then within 24
-
hours, I can write a letter and transmit
it to the foreign minister of. And that's
-
your question. Who will actually will, ...
my interlocutor as the UN rapporteur is
-
always the foreign minister of the country
of the UN member state through the
-
diplomatic mission in Geneva. And so, they
will then have to distribute it to the
-
proper authorities in their country. If
it's an allegation about a police station,
-
that will have to, you know, transmit it
to the police and so on. But depending on
-
the country and the precise allegation, it
will be different authorities. It could be
-
a migration center or something like this.
But for me, it's very it's a diplomatic
-
protocol. I always have to go through the
Foreign Ministry and they will then have
-
to initiate those investigations and
inside the country.
-
Herald: OK, thank you very much. The Next
question would be, will Assange be
-
able to appeal to the European Court of
Justice? How long do you estimate Julian
-
will stay in prison until the highest
applicable court would publish a decision?
-
And are there any moves that can still be
made from a lawyer's point of perspective?
-
Well, I'm clearly not his lawyer. But, you
know, and his legal team would have to
-
speak to the strategy. So, I can't. I'm
not representing him, obviously. But
-
clearly, yes, at some point you will be
able, as soon as the last instance
-
decision has been validated by the last
instance of court in the U.K., then this
-
decision can be appealed to the European
Court of Human Rights, not the European
-
Court of Justice, that's an EU court, but
the European Court of Human Rights would
-
be that instance. They can also, already
now, appeal to that court for preliminary
-
protection, for example, to release him
from prison and to house arrest or
-
something like this. But that's a bit
technical. But yes, at the end there is an
-
opportunity to appeal to the European
Court of Human Rights. And the question of
-
how long it will last really depends on so
many factors. What's the strategy of the
-
lawyers? What's the strategy of the court?
You know, how long does the court take to
-
decide, after a hearing? Do they take two
weeks or do they take four months? It's up
-
to them. And so, it's, ... I can't, you
know, I can't. But it could last anywhere
-
from at least one year to, you know,
another three years or something like
-
this.
Stefania: I just want to add one important
-
info about this European Court of Human
Rights because according to the documents
-
I was able to get from my Freedom of
Information litigation, the UK authorities
-
were discussing with the Swedish
authorities an attempt to extradite Julian
-
Assange without allowing him to apply to
the European Court of Human Rights and
-
obtaining the protective measure. So, it
was an attempt to extradite him before he
-
could get a protective measure. Do you
think that means that they could play the
-
same game for the extradition to the US?
Nils: It's conceivable, yes. The problem
-
is that normally a judgment of the, ... or
an appeal to the European Court of Human
-
Rights is not, ... does not suspend the
validity of the national decision. So if
-
the Supreme Court of the UK allows the
extradition, for example, and Assange
-
appeals that then he can still be
extradited, unless the European Court of
-
Human Rights orders preliminary measures,
you know, that suspend that the validity
-
of that ruling. So but they still have to
decide that. And obviously, between the
-
decision of the Supreme Court and the
issuing of that preliminary protective
-
measure, there will be a few days. And so
in this time, you know, they can try to
-
send him out. So, it's very important that
his lawyers react in time and perhaps even
-
provisionally ask for measures like this.
But again, you know, his legal team would
-
be better placed to answer those
questions.
-
Herald: OK, thank you very much. I hope
you might answer the next question. What
-
is the government's justification for
keeping Assange in Belmarsh? And what
-
happens to other high, or high risk,
persons above who have a flight risk that
-
are on remand in the UK?
Nils: Well, the government doesn't just,
-
... I mean, they just say he's a flight
risk. OK. Well, yes, there is a precedent
-
that he's basically his, look, ... you
know, he's asked for asylum in the
-
Ecuadorian embassy. So now clearly, you
know, in my view, even the whole
-
extradition proceeding is illegitimate and
illegal. You know, for various reasons
-
because it concerns espionage, which is a
political offense and because, you know,
-
it's protected by press freedom, what he's
done and all of these things. But even if,
-
for the sake of the argument, if we accept
that this is a legitimate extradition
-
proceeding, then if he's a flight risk,
then yes, you can. You can secure his
-
presence, but you have to use the least
harmful means to do that. So, you cannot
-
take measures that are more restrictive
than necessary. And so if you put him in
-
house arrest, a guarded house arrest where
he cannot leave because there's a guard in
-
front of the door, that's sufficient, and
it's even cheaper than a high security
-
prison. And that's what they've done with
with with Augusto Pinochet, who was, I
-
remind you, not accused of journalism. He
was accused of having, you know, being
-
responsible for murder and torture and
disappearance of thousands of people as
-
the dictator of ex-dictator of Chile. And
the British, But he was an ally of the
-
United Kingdom. So, but he was in the
legal, legally accepted, (cough) excuse
-
me, except that he was accused of serious
crimes, and Julian Assange is not. He was
-
in the same extradition kind of situation,
and he was allowed to spend one and a half
-
years in a luxurious villa where he was
visited by, you know, ex-Prime Minister
-
Thatcher. But Julian Assange has been put
in a high security prison. That's, ...
-
he's not a violent person. He's put in the
toughest high security prison where, you
-
know, violent criminals are being held.
And so, that's actually that's absolutely
-
not justifiable. He could be kept in
anywhere else, you know where he can be
-
supervised, and he has a human right to
live his family life, to live his
-
profession. There is, ... he's not serving
a sentence. He's not convicted of
-
anything. And his health is in the dire
state. We have examined him two years ago
-
and warned that he would enter a downward
spiral very soon, and it actually
-
happened. He was not even able to to to
attend his, ... to observe his own appeals
-
hearing at the end of October. He actually
had a stroke during that hearing. And it's
-
absolutely grotesque that the judges in
that hearing, you know, decided that his
-
health was stable enough to be extradited
to the US, based on some flimsy assurances
-
that don't guarantee anything. You know
that don't protect him from anything.
-
Herald: Then this question fits right
perfectly to that because it does. Are you
-
confident that the US government won't
harm Assange as they promised?
-
Nils: To the contrary, I'm confident they
will because there's no way he's going to
-
get a fair trial. The public narrative
against Assange is so overwhelming, and
-
the prejudice is so overwhelming against
him. He's going to be tried in Alexandria,
-
the infamous espionage court where I
indicated before it's a secret trial. Very
-
often, the defense does not even have
access to the evidence against the
-
suspect, and there is no press allowed.
There is no trial observation allowed. You
-
know, there is, ... the jury takes
information from the prosecution that the
-
defense doesn't have access to. No one has
ever been acquitted in that court. It's a
-
national security court. No one has ever
been acquitted, and people are being
-
threatened with enormous prison sentences
there, unless they accept some kind of
-
plea bargain. In his case, it would
certainly mean that he would have to spend
-
decades in prison. So, ... and for this
type of suspect, it's always solitary
-
confinement, which means near complete
isolation. No contact with the outside
-
world, no contact to other inmates, no
talking even to the guards. You know, very
-
often the US authorities then say, Oh, we
have to put him on suicide watch, you
-
know, for his own benefit, which means
they wake him up every 15 minutes at
-
night. He cannot sit down or lie down
during the day. And it's really a form of
-
torture. And I say this as an expert, and
I'm not the only one saying this. It's my
-
predecessors. That's, you know, Amnesty
International, Human Rights Watch.
-
Everybody agrees these types of conditions
are a violation of the Convention against
-
Torture and Ill Treatment.
Herald: Thank you for that answer. I have
-
one last question, and that's probably the
big one. What can society do, or what
-
needs to happen, to stop the extradition
from happening now? And what would need to
-
happen to undo the effects of the US
government's approach in this case, like
-
the intimidation of journalists?
Nils: Well, I guess, Stephanie, you will
-
have something to say about this as well.
I mean, from my perspective. The US has to
-
drop this case. They have to, or they have
to be pressured by their own media and
-
their own society to drop this case
because, you know, the US society is
-
really, ... is they have the political
influence on their political leadership,
-
and it's in their own interest that they
stop this from happening because otherwise
-
they will lose, as I said before, the
right to know what their government is
-
doing, the fact already it lost that
right, actually, they have to regain it.
-
And I think, so, civil society is very
important, but the media, especially the
-
mainstream media, that they start picking
this up is very, very important. Public
-
opinion has to turn around and not only in
the US, in the UK, in Australia, in Sweden
-
and anywhere, anywhere. People have to ask
their governments, Why are you accepting
-
that a country that you are allied with,
you know, is persecuting journalists, that
-
expose their war crimes? We have to ask
the people, that are elected to
-
parliament, why they are, accepting this?
Why they are keeping silent, you know
-
because, it will cost it will cost us very
dearly. I don't know what you think,
-
Stefania.
Stefania: Yes, I absolutely agree with
-
you. We absolutely have to win this case,
which means we absolutely have to put
-
pressure, take to the streets, must see
press coverage of the situation. It's a
-
scandal that it took an Italian journalist
to litigate a Freedom of Information case
-
in the UK and the US, Australia and Sweden
because no one else did it. It's a scandal
-
that you took an Italian journalist to try
to discover the pressure from the Crown
-
Prosecution Service on the Swedish
authorities and the attempt to bypass the
-
European Court of Human Rights. Can you
believe that the Guardian was not able to
-
do this, or can you believe that the New
York Times could not expose the CIA
-
attempts to kill him? I mean, it took
Yahoo? I mean, can you believe Yahoo had
-
more sources inside the CIA than The
Washington Post or the New York Times that
-
inside this agency? Can you believe that
they were not able to expose before Yahoo
-
News? So, we absolutely have to call them
out and to make, ... to have them on
-
board. They don't want to be on board. We
have seen they don't cover the case
-
properly. They say they want to be
factual, when in fact they have not looked
-
for the facts. And it took an Italian
judicial system, a U.N. special
-
rapporteur, to investigate the case, which
is unbelievable, you know. So, we have to
-
have them on board, and we absolutely have
to win this case. Having the case dropped,
-
the investigation dropped because it is a
scandal. I mean, in 20 years of
-
journalism, my experience of 20 years as a
journalist, 15 in investigative
-
journalism, I have never heard of a media
organization put under investigation for
-
11 years. I never heard this. I don't
know. I don't believe it exists. Not even,
-
... I mean, just in seriously
authoritarian dictatorships. I never heard
-
of a media organization under
investigation for 11 years as WikiLeaks,
-
... the WikiLeaks journalists have been.
So, we absolutely have to win this case,
-
and we have not to rely on the legal
process. The legal process is completely
-
corrupt, completely corrupt. So, we, it is
up to us. It's up to us to take to the
-
street and to have press coverage or
whatever press coverage we can, the
-
independent media, the citizen journalism
for the whatever. We can to mobilize
-
people to have people taking to the
streets and realize this monstrous
-
injustice. In the preface to my book, Ken
Loach, the great film director Ken Loach,
-
calls it "this monstrous injustice". He's
absolutely right.
-
Nils: And if you allow me to just say one
sentence here also, to conclude my own
-
statement, here is just to say, don't
think that this is just the Assange case,
-
that is the tip of the iceberg. And I
wrote the book about this, not because
-
this is the only case, but this is the
case that makes it most visible what's
-
really going on? It's actually a keyhole
through which you can see into a parallel
-
world that already exists, where democracy
and the rule of law is being
-
systematically undermined. So, don't
believe those public narratives, in this
-
case or in others, you know. Ask
questions, ask for evidence and always
-
ask, you know, who has what kind of
interests here? And are we still able to
-
know what the powerful are doing with the
power and the money they have? And that's
-
really at the core of it. So, I hope this
was useful, and clearly I invite people,
-
you know, read, read, it's the Stefania's
book. Read my book, read, read about the
-
case and make up your own mind, you know
because it's about your rights and your
-
life.
Stefania: Absolutely. Let me close this
-
conversation with reminding people that we
will keep this conversation going in the
-
"after three village" at 10 p.m. We will
wait for you. We appreciate more questions
-
about these important crucial case. Thank you.
Herald: Yeah, thank you both very much for
-
being here and for the very interesting
talk, and maybe we see each other later in
-
the "after three village" and yeah, have a
good evening.
-
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