Amid the COVID-19 pandemic, with the world screeched to a halt, the prosecution of WikiLeaks publisher Julian Assange continues. At the case management court hearing on Tuesday, April 7, Judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled that Julian Assange’s extradition hearing would resume in May as previously planned despite the global spread of coronavirus and that, if needed, there would possibly be a further hearing in July.

The effect of the COVID-19 outbreak was notable in the unusually empty courtroom. There were reportedly five journalists spaced along the counsel benches and five supporters in the gallery, with all lawyers dialing in. Assange – who is being held solely for the US extradition request in southeast London’s high-security Belmarsh prison – was not present in person or via videolink.

Deepa Govindarajan Driver, one of the five members of the public in the courthouse, later shared her account: that she and several others heard a court official say that Assange was "unwell" and therefore not able to attend the hearing.

Defense lawyer Edward Fitzgerald QC, speaking via a telephone link, argued that the second part of Assange’s hearing, listed for three weeks starting May 18, should be delayed until September as coronavirus related restrictions makes it difficult for his client to have a fair hearing at the earlier date. Fitzgerald spoke about the challenges of his legal team having access to Assange due to the Covid-19 pandemic.

Coronavirus in prisons

The threat of coronavirus affects everyone indiscriminately. On the prior Sunday evening, dismay swept over Britain as Prime Minister Boris Johnson was moved into intensive care after being admitted for coronavirus-related breathing difficulties. With no space for social distancing and multiple people being placed in one cell, prisons have particularly become the epicenter of the virus. In the UK there are now 88 prisoners and 15 staff who have tested positive for COVID-19. Reportedly, two Pentonville Prison staff members recently died.

In response to the coronavirus pandemic, the British Ministry of Justice (MoJ) announced that they were preparing to release thousands of low risk inmates in England and Wales. Yet Assange was excluded from this temporary release. Australian Associated Press confirmed with the Ministry of Justice that Assange, who is being held on remand, will not be eligible for an early COVID-19 release from prison with other inmates because he is not serving a criminal sentence.

A Belmarsh prisoner list obtained by journalist and co-founder of Declassified UK Matt Kennard showed Assange being one of just two inmates of the 800 at London’s Belmarsh maximum security prison who are being held for violating bail conditions (20% of prisoners are murderers, with nearly 2/3 violent offenders).

Investigations by Declassified UK also revealed that Belmarsh prison’s poor conditions lack adequate precautions against infection, particularly in a dental facility that has been repeatedly criticized by prison inspectors. The report indicated that such unsafe prison conditions put Assange, who has significant dental problems along with a lung condition, at great risk of being exposed to coronavirus.

The disease of injustice

Due to these health concerns, Assange’s lawyers made an emergency bail application two weeks ago for his temporary release. On March 25 Judge Vanessa Baraitser, who refused to postpone the proceeding of US extradition request on Tuesday, rejected the bail application, stating that "No cases of COVID 19 having been confirmed in HMS Belmarsh."

After the judge’s vindictive ruling, former Green Party Presidential candidate Dr. Jill Stein noted:

"Assange is at dire risk in UK prison. Even before #Covid_19 nearly 200 @Doctors4Assange called for his release due to health emergency. As a nonviolent prisoner awaiting trial he should be released on bail. If he dies, how is this not premeditated killing of a political prisoner?"

With the British state’s failure to provide basic medical care and safety to inmates, and its often punitive and cruel policies, the disease of disdain for human life and rule of law has now become pandemic. From media organizations to prisons and courts, depravity has infected every aspect of our society. As corruption of the system signals the crisis of Western liberal democracy, the moral courage of the informed public becomes the only antidote to the virus of injustice that has begun to suffocate the heart of democracy.

Antivirus of Contagious Courage

Responding to the government’s inaction and medical neglect, a network of resistance has begun to emerge. The Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ) has launched a petition on behalf of 250 journalists behind bars, calling on authorities to free political prisoners immediately and unconditionally. More than 28,000 people have now signed the petition urging the UK government to release Julian Assange from Belmarsh Prison before Covid-19 spreads further. Members of Parliament are being asked to take action.

On Thursday April 9, parliamentarians from Assange’s native Australia pressed UK officials to release Assange into home detention. In a letter addressed to Bob Neill, the chair of the UK Commons Justice Committee, and Robert Buckland, the British lord chancellor and secretary of state for justice, a pair of Australian MP, Andrew Wilkie and George Christenson argued that Assange, who is a nonviolent remand prisoner with no history of harm to the community, is "not convicted and is thus entitled to the presumption of innocence". They also emphasized that doctors have warned that Assange is "at high risk from dying" if he contracts Covid-19.

Assange has been indicted with 17 counts under the US Espionage Act related to WikiLeaks’ 2010-11 publications concerning US wars in Iraq and Afghanistan, embarrassing US diplomatic details, and US torture in Guantanamo Bay Prison. Sunday April 5 marked the 10 years anniversary of WikiLeaks’ publication of the Collateral Murder video, exposing war crimes and killing of innocent civilians including two Reuters journalists.

In the COVID-19 emergency, the prosecution of Julian Assange is aggressing further. Coronavirus has now hit Belmarsh prison. It has been alleged that there have now been four coronavirus cases among prisoners at Belmarsh, with one of them having died. Now, the threat of the extradition to the US, where he could be sentenced to 175 years in prison, has become an imminent risk to his life. Under the menace of a killer virus, Assange becomes ever more defenseless and the notion of a free press is given a death sentence. Only through each person’s courage to stand up against oppression now becoming contagious, can we defend our democracy and save the life of this imprisoned journalist.

Nozomi Hayase, Ph.D., is a writer who has been covering issues of freedom of speech, transparency, and decentralized movements. Her work is featured in many publications. Find her on twitter @nozomimagine.