Fiancee of Julian Assange pleads for the WikiLeaks founder to be released from prison

Stella Moris has called for her fiancee and WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange to be released from a UK prison for the sake of their two young sons and society.

Julian Assange and his partner Stella Moris-Smith Robertson, who is pleading for the WikiLeaks founder to be freed from prison.

Julian Assange and his partner Stella Moris-Smith Robertson, who is pleading for his freedom. Source: AAP

The fiancee of Julian Assange has appealed for the WikiLeaks founder to be freed in order to restore the public's faith in "mature democracy".

Stella Moris penned an opinion piece recounting her vivid childhood memories of Botswana during South Africa's deadly raid on the capital Gaborone in June 1985.

The 37-year-old said half of the 12 people killed by Apartheid government forces were civilian activists and not African National Congress fighters.
Mr Assange with his son.
Julian Assange fathered two sons while living at the Ecuadorian embassy in London. Source: Supplied
"I have absorbed my parents' vivid memories of the raid," Ms Moris wrote in Spanish newspaper El Pais.

"If that terrible night shaped my perspective of the world, the incarceration of the father of my children will surely mark theirs."
She then detailed the harassment they faced when Mr Assange was living the Ecuadorian embassy.

Ms Moris said a Spanish security firm spied on them and tried to steal their son Gabriel's nappy for a paternity test.

The same firm also had plans to poison or abduct Mr Assange, she said.

"None of this information is surprising to me but as a parent I ponder how to manage it," she wrote.

"I want our children to grow up with the clarity of conviction that I had as a little girl. Peril lay beyond the South African border. I want them to believe that inequitable treatment is not tolerated in mature democracies."

Ms Moris said if she and her sons were targets of harassment then nothing was off-limits.

She said US secretary of state Mike Pompeo had also in April threatened the families of International Criminal Court Lawyers who investigating alleged US war crimes in Afghanistan.

"The same crimes that Julian exposed through WikiLeaks, and which the US wants to imprison him over," she said.

"Julian needs to be released now. For him, for our family, and for the society we all want our children to grow up in."

Mr Assange's lawyers are expected to agree to a new date for his extradition hearing at Westminster Magistrates Court on Monday.

The Australian faces 17 charges of violating the US Espionage Act and one of conspiring to commit computer intrusion.

He's accused of publishing thousands of secret US diplomatic and military files, some of which revealed alleged war crimes in Iraq and Afghanistan.

The charges carry a total of 175 years' imprisonment.


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3 min read
Published 2 May 2020 7:00am
Updated 2 May 2020 2:31pm


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