Sunday, December 22, 2024

‘There was an attempt to brush us away’: How six Australian MPs took the cause of Julian Assange to Washington

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Inside a meeting room deep inside the Robert F Kennedy Building in Washington DC last September, representatives of the US Department of Justice (DoJ) must’ve wondered what hit them.

A cross-party delegation of jet-lagged and obstinate Australian parliamentarians had just arrived to advocate for Julian Assange’s release. The officials were about to hear the kind of arguments that were not normally ventilated in the building known locally as “Main Justice”.

The meeting lasted over an hour. Six of those present inside the room have described those conversations in various ways to ABC Investigations — including as being “robust”, “respectful” and even at times “aggressive”.

Now that Assange has been released, participants in that meeting feel free to talk about how their arguments were conveyed, how they were received, and the influence that they had inside the walls of the DoJ.

“They were surprised, I would say blindsided by our delegation,” Greens senator Peter Whish-Wilson told the ABC.

“We no longer have a PM [Scott Morrison] who boasts about having Mike Pompeo on speed dial. They weren’t aware of how much things had shifted in Australia.”

The WikiLeaks founder walking out of the US District Court in Saipan, Northern Mariana Islands on Wednesday.(Reuters: Kim Hong-Ji)

Delegates told the room that not only had the government changed in Australia, but public sentiment had as well, with the vast majority of Australians now wanting Assange to return home.

“They expressed scepticism about this, but I said they had been talking to the wrong people if that was their view,” said Senator Whish-Wilson.

Sitting on one side of the long mahogany table were three US departmental officials and a media adviser.

On the other side, as diverse a collection of Australian politicians as you could imagine – Senator Whish-Wilson, his fellow Greens senator David Shoebridge, former deputy prime minister Barnaby Joyce, independent MP Monique Ryan, Labor MP Tony Zappia, and Liberal senator Alex Antic.

Also present was Julian Assange’s brother Gabriel Shipton and Rohan Wenn, an adviser to independent MP Andrew Wilkie, who could not make the trip.

The six politicians stand in front of the US Capitol building.

Australian MPs (from left) Tony Zappia, Barnaby Joyce, Monique Ryan, Peter Whish-Wilson, Alex Antic and David Shoebridge in Washington DC on September 20, 2023.

Their mission was to convince the department responsible for prosecuting Assange that the dial had shifted in Australia and that its people, and its politicians, wanted the WikiLeaks publisher to be freed and returned home.

But the reception they received surprised the Australian delegation.

“They were not particularly warm,” Dr Ryan said.

“There was a real sense of opposition to our involvement, as in, ‘Why are you here? You know you cannot influence this process. It’s really got nothing to do with politicians,'” she said.

“There was an attempt to sort of brush us away, and we weren’t interested in that.”

For Mr Shipton, it was a confronting meeting. He said at times he found it “aggressive”.

An image of a screen showing an Interpol website with Julian Assange as Wanted

A wanted page for WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange is seen on the Interpol Internet in 2010.
 (Reuters: Tim Chong)

It was difficult to hear arguments made by departmental officials, who he said wanted his brother jailed for the rest of his life.

“They were saying Julian had to face justice and that he was avoiding justice by fighting extradition. These guys (the Australian politicians) were arguing back at the DoJ. All of them did,” he said.

“They all picked up on a different piece of the argument — watching them all come together and work together was something else. I was very impressed.”

The delegation raised several issues including freedom of speech, shifting public sentiment in Australia, the US-Australia alliance, and jurisdictional rights.

Senator Whish-Wilson says Mr Joyce played an important role.

“He said, ‘I was the deputy PM, I’ve been the acting PM. I have been the deputy head of the National Security Committee for many years, and I don’t agree with what Assange has done. But it was not illegal and this extra-territorial overreach [by the US] is a precedent that cannot stand.'”

Barnaby Joyce speaks at a press conference, where journalists hold microphones. Other politicians stand behind him.

MPs recall the important role Barnaby Joyce played in the meeting.(ABC News: Bradley McLennan)

Dr Ryan said that the US officials pushed back against their arguments, claiming Assange’s freedom was purely a legal matter, not a political one.

It was then that Mr Joyce brought Johnny Depp’s dogs into it, raising the infamous case in 2015 when the then-minister for agriculture threatened to euthanise the Hollywood star’s pooches — Pistol and Boo — due to quarantine breaches.

Dr Ryan said Mr Joyce suggested to the meeting that political considerations inevitably played a role in these sorts of matters.

“Basically, he said there had been pressure placed on him at the time and if it had been left to him, Pistol, Boo, Johnny, and Amber would be behind bars in Australia.”

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