UK govt accused of ‘fiddling’ Covid-19 death figures amid ‘family consent’ claims

On the 26th March, RT News reports on Twitter announcements

Editors’s Note: This article is included as fighting a pandemic relies on timely and accurate information. ‘Fiddling’ figures adds to the suggestion the UK Health Authorities do not have the situation in control.

The UK government is facing allegations they are manipulating coronavirus death numbers, after revealing they are changing the way the figures are released, claiming family consent is now required.

On Wednesday night, the Department for Health and Social Care published the latest Covid-19 figures showing an increase of 43 deaths – less than half the fatalities from the previous day (87).

A positive sign that the number had decreased? At first glance, yes, until it’s revealed those figures “do not cover a full 24 hour period” as usual.

So why? BBC Newsnight’s Nick Watt explained that the government was changing the way it releases Covid-19 death figures, which “may not actually be the deaths that have taken place over the last 24 hrs,” as family consent is now required.

The government’s sudden shift in the criteria of reporting coronavirus numbers has provoked accusations that they are manipulating data without a valid reason. Luke Cooper, an associate researcher at LSE Conflict and Civil society research claimed that it “sounds an awful lot like government is fiddling the figures,” insisting that it is “not true” that consent is required “if data is anonymized.”

. . .

Read original compilation in RT News ( complete with original tweets)

Coronavirus: London hospitals facing ‘tsunami’ of patients

On 26th March, Chris Hopson, the chief executive of NHS Providers was interviewed on radio

Editors Note: This has been included as it appears the day after Julians Bail application on Covid-19 risks was dismissed. How can a health service support prisons when it is raising alarm at supporting the general public?

London hospitals are facing a “continuous tsunami” of coronavirus patients and some are likely to be overwhelmed in a few days, according to Chris Hopson, the chief executive of NHS Providers – which represents hospital bosses.

Hopson said hospitals had expanded critical care capacity between five and sevenfold in the last weeks, but chief executives have been alarmed by the speed at which beds are filling up in the capital.

He said the problems had been exacerbated by medical staff off sick with suspected coronavirus or in vulnerable groups, with 30% to 50% not at work in some trusts.

Speaking to BBC Radio 4’s Today programme, he said: “They are struggling with the explosion of demand in seriously ill patients. They are saying it’s the number arriving and the speed with which they are arriving and how ill they are. They talk about wave after wave after wave. The words that are used to me are that it’s a continuous tsunami. As one said to me, it’s much bigger and large numbers with a greater degree of stretch than you can ever have possibly imagined.

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Legal arguments during the first week of Julian Assange’s extradition hearing highlight lack of US evidence

On 28th February, RSF reported

Editor’ Note: This observation may be applied to the Bail application of the 25th March when the prosecution claimed Julian Assange was not a Covid-19 risk or Judge Baraitser acknowledged Julian was not the only vulnerable detainee in Belmarsh.

During the first week of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange’s US extradition hearing in London, Reporters Without Borders (RSF) was concerned by the clear lack of evidence from the US for its charges against Assange. RSF also remains concerned about Assange’s wellbeing and inability to participate properly in his hearing, following reports of mistreatment at Belmarsh prison and the judge’s rejection of his application to sit with his lawyers in the courtroom. The hearing will resume from 18 May, when three weeks of evidence will be heard.

RSF conducted an unprecedented international trial-monitoring mission to the UK for Julian Assange’s US extradition hearing from 24-27 February, as the prosecution and defence presented their legal arguments at Woolwich Crown Court in London. RSF Secretary-General Christophe Deloire and RSF Germany Director Christian Mihr joined RSF UK Bureau Director Rebecca Vincent for the hearing, and Vincent was able to systematically monitor each sitting over the four days. RSF staff from London, Paris, and Berlin also staged an action outside the adjacent Belmarsh Prison – where Assange is being held – on 23 February, and joined protests outside the court on 24 February.

Read Full article in Reporters Without Boarder’s Web Site

Urgent action needed to prevent COVID-19 “rampaging through places of detention”

GENEVA (25 March 2020) – UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Michelle Bachelet has called on governments to take urgent action to protect the health and safety of people in detention and other closed facilities, as part of overall efforts to contain the COVID-19 pandemic.

“Covid-19 has begun to strike prisons, jails and immigration detention centres, as well as residential care homes and psychiatric hospitals, and risks rampaging through such institutions’ extremely vulnerable populations,” said Bachelet.

“In many countries, detention facilities are overcrowded, in some cases dangerously so. People are often held in unhygienic conditions and health services are inadequate or even non-existent. Physical distancing and self-isolation in such conditions are practically impossible,” she added.

“Governments are facing huge demands on resources in this crisis and are having to take difficult decisions. But I urge them not to forget those behind bars, or those confined in places such as closed mental health facilities, nursing homes  and orphanages, because the consequences of neglecting them are potentially catastrophic,” the High Commissioner said.

“It is vital that governments should address the situation of detained people in their crisis planning to protect detainees, staff, visitors and of course wider society,” she added.

“With outbreaks of the disease, and an increasing number of deaths, already reported in prisons and other institutions in an expanding number of countries, authorities should act now to prevent further loss of life among detainees and staff,” Bachelet said. 

The High Commissioner urged governments and relevant authorities to work quickly to reduce the number of people in detention, noting several countries have already undertaken some positive actions. Authorities should examine ways to release those particularly vulnerable to COVID-19, among them older detainees and those who are sick, as well as low-risk offenders. They should also continue to provide for the specific health-care requirements of women prisoners, including those who are pregnant, as well as those of inmates with disabilities and of juvenile detainees.

“Now, more than ever, governments should release every person detained without sufficient legal basis, including political prisoners and others detained simply for expressing critical or dissenting views,” Bachelet stressed. 

When people are released, they should be medically screened and measures taken to ensure that if needed they receive care and proper follow-up, including health monitoring. 

“Under international human rights law, States have an obligation to take steps to prevent foreseeable threats to public health and have a duty to ensure that all who need vital medical care can receive it,” Bachelet said. 

For those in detention, the State has a particular duty to protect inmates’ physical and mental health and well-being, as set out by the UN Standard Minimum Rules for the Treatment of Prisoners (also known as the Nelson Mandela Rules).

Measures taken amid a health crisis should not undermine the fundamental rights of detained people, including their rights to adequate food and water. Safeguards against ill-treatment of people in custody, including access to a lawyer and doctor, should also be fully respected. 

“Restrictions on visits to closed institutions may be required to help prevent COVID-19 outbreaks, but such steps need to be introduced in a transparent way and communicated clearly to those affected. Suddenly halting contact with the outside world risks aggravating what may be tense, difficult and potentially dangerous situations,” Bachelet said. She noted examples of alternative measures taken in some countries, such as setting up expanded videoconferencing, allowing increased phone calls with family members and permitting email.  

“COVID-19 poses a huge challenge to the whole of society, as governments take steps to enforce physical distancing. It is vital such measures are upheld, but I am deeply concerned that some countries are threatening to impose prison sentences for those who fail to obey. This is likely to exacerbate the grave situation in prisons and do little to halt the disease’s spread,” Bachelet warned. 

“Imprisonment should be a measure of last resort, particularly during this crisis.”

The UN Human Rights Office and the World Health Organization are due this week to issue an interim guidance paper – COVID 19: Focus on persons deprived of their liberty – which will contain key messages and actions for other UN agencies, governments and relevant authorities, national human rights institutions, and civil society

Official Notification: United Nations Human Rights Office of the High Commissioner

If Britain allows a frail Julian Assange to die in Covid-19-infested jail, the blood will be on London’s hands

On the 24th March, Chris Sweeney writes in RT News

At a time when even the likes of Iran are letting thousands of non-violent offenders out of jail, the UK’s refusal to budge on one journalist is indefensible and surrenders the moral high ground it never had to begin with.

Julian Assange has been at the heart of, or connected to, almost every major political event of the past decade. And unwittingly, he’s now set to take centre-stage in the unfolding Covid-19 pandemic crisis.

On Wednesday, his legal team will apply for him to be unshackled and let out of London’s Belmarsh Prison on bail. Their argument is that because of overcrowding, the WikiLeaks founder is at very high risk of contracting the virus – and should be set free.

The claim is given even more heft by over 100 doctors confirming in medical journal the Lancet that even without the threat of the virus, he’s in a “dire state of health,” which makes him even more susceptible.

For me, that simple logic is enough and if it were my call, I’d throw the keys through the cell bars and let Julian do the rest. But sadly, it doesn’t look like that’s going to happen. Earlier this month, a Prison Services spokesman said: “We are not planning to release any prisoners as a result of Covid-19.

Once again, Britain has placed itself on the wrong side of a moral debate.

Assange hasn’t committed any crime under British law as it stands – back in September, he completed a 50-week sentence after hiding out in Ecuador’s London embassy to avoid being sent to Sweden.

He is now solely being held whilst the courts decide whether to extradite him to the US.

This is the same US that told the grieving family of 19-year-old Harry Dunn to get stuffed and to not dare mention the ‘E’ word, when the English teenager was tragically killed by Anne Sacoolas. She’s the idiotic wife of an American intelligence officer who forgot what country she was in, drove head-on into Harry on the wrong side of the road and then fled back home across the Atlantic.

Assange hasn’t killed anyone; his alleged crimes are espionage and publishing classified documents. Well, thank Christ he did, as those papers finally shed a light on a whole host of indiscretions and sordid abuse that the American military was responsible for in Iraq and Afghanistan.They have been subsequently reported widely by news organisations all across the globe.

Professor Richard Coker, an expert on infectious diseases at the London School of Hygiene and Tropical Medicine, has warned that a coronavirus outbreak may affect 60 percent of all prisoners – and Andrea Butt, the president of the British Prison Governors’ Association, has voiced the opinion that there will be deaths in custody.

As if this wasn’t enough to force Johnson’s hand, we’ve got the case of Nazanin Zaghari-Ratcliffe.

She’s a joint British-Iranian national who was sentenced to five years by a court in Tehran for attempting to overthrow the government.

During his time as foreign secretary, blundering Johnson spoke out on her case and incredibly made incriminating claims that she had been in Iran teaching journalism classes, when the woman herself had vehemently denied anything of the sort – and implored that she had only been on a trip to visit family.

Anyway, Nazanin has been allowed out on bail.

Oh, and so have 84,999 others in Iran – which operates under a regime not exactly renowned for its compassion.

Even their authorities have realised that risking lives is not above altering a legal system’s protocols.

Local jails in the US, including places like Chicago, Louisville, Austin, Virginia Beach, and Omaha, have also begun releasing nonviolent offenders due to Covid-19 fears. The Canadian province of Saskatchewan let out two men on bail for the same reason, even though both were charged with manslaughter relating to fentanyl laced with cocaine.

Still, the British government, which is helmed by the so-called brilliant minds formerly of hallowed universities such as Oxford and Cambridge, is hunkering down to buck that trend.

What sort of state would keep a journalist locked up and simultaneously endanger his or her life?

It’s the same sort of state that seemingly wants to lecture other nations on what is correct and then sticks its nose into all sorts of things, because of its perceived status as a fair, just and respected country.

Well Britain could, and likely will, be left with blood on its hands on Wednesday. And you know what? It won’t wash off.

Read original article in RT News

Assange loses bid for COVID-19 bail

On 26th March, Marty Silk reports for AAP

District Judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled that Assange had absconded before and said that Belmarsh prison was following government guidelines to protect detainees with no confirmed virus cases there yet.

She accepted that government advice may change rapidly but for the time being she denied strict bail for the 48-year-old.

“As matters stand today this global pandemic does not, of itself, yet provide grounds for Mr Assange’s release,” Judge Baraitser ruled.

“In my view there are substantial grounds to believe that if [released] … today he would not return to face his extradition hearing.

“There are no conditions that allay this concern and this application is therefore refused.”

Defence lawyer Edward Fitzgerald QC wore a face mask and his colleague Mark Summers attended via Zoom, while US government lawyers dialled in.

Mr Fitzgerald said Assange has prior chest and tooth infections, and osteoporosis, placing him at a higher risk from the virus.

The QC described prisons as “epidemiological pumps” where diseases spread rapidly and said the defence team had recently been denied entry to Belmarsh because 100 prison staff were self-isolating.

“If he continues to be detained in prison … there is a real risk that his health and his life will be seriously endangered in circumstances from which he cannot escape,” Mr Fitzgerald told the court.

The lawyer also raised the prospect of Assange’s next extradition hearing on May 18 being postponed due to lockdown measures.

He said witnesses overseas could be unable to travel and Assange may be unable to meet his counsel in the locked-down prison.

Clair Dobbin for the US government, said Assange’s history – including him seeking asylum in the Ecuadorian embassy for almost seven years – showed the high risk he would abscond.

“There are insurmountable hurdles for Mr Assange being granted bail,” she said.

“He has been tested before and failed.”

But Mr Fitzgerald insisted that Assange’s past actions should not be a basis for refusing bail.

“The focus of someone in his vulnerable position, with his family ties here, is on survival, not on absconsion,” he said.

The defence also revealed that Assange had a partner and at least two children living in the UK

Last month, Assange’s bid to leave the dock and sit with his lawyers in court was also knocked back by Judge Baraitser.

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Marty Silk on Twitter

Editors Note: While there may be ‘no cases in reported HMP Bemarsh’ the Daily Mail reports 19 inmates from 10 UK prisons test positive for coronavirus. The virus has penetrated the prison system and prison staff are now the most likely carrier.

Amnesty International: Assange bail application highlights COVID-19 risk to many vulnerable detainees and prisoners

On 25th March 2020, Massimo Moratti, Amnesty International’s Europe Deputy Director of Research says

If Julian Assange is shown to have an underlying condition that puts him at risk, he should be immediately released on bail

Decreasing the prison population and the number of people in detention centres is a crucial means of slowing the spread of COVID-19 and keeping people safe

For those who remain in detention or prison the UK must provide a standard of healthcare that meets each person’s individual needs and ensures the maximum possible protection against the spread of COVID-19

Background

The general provision of health care for prisoners is a state responsibility. Prisoners should enjoy the same standards of health care that are available in the community, including when it comes to testing, prevention and treatment of COVID-19.

Conditions in UK prisons and detention centres are substandard. It is imperative that health and safety protocols are put in place to effectively ward off harm while ensuring that prisoners’ and detainees’ rights are protected.

Editors Note: This statement suggest the bail application is based entirely on medical grounds. The question whether the NHS can support the prison system if or when it is being over run serving the community at large becomes pertinent.

Read original article on Amnesty International web site

Assange Bail Application Citing Risk of Covid-19

Lawyers for Julian Assange are to make a bail application for the WikiLeaks co-founder, arguing that he is in imminent danger of contracting the deadly novel coronavirus at the center of a global pandemic while in prison.

WikiLeaks released a statement on Monday, saying the 48-year-old’s legal team would now be pushing for bail at a hearing at Westminster Magistrates court in London on Wednesday (25th March).

The Prison Officers Association trade union revealed last week that over 100 staff and 75 prisoners across the UK were in isolation after showing Covid-19 symptoms. So far, one prisoner has tested positive for the dangerous disease in Manchester.

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RT News interviews Dr Tomaz Pierscionek (Doctors For Assange)

An online film festival – The WikiLeaks Lockdown List

The WikiLeaks official Don’t Extradite Assange campaign announces an online film festival – The WikiLeaks Lockdown List. Our contribution to those who are following medical advice and self-isolating due to the Coronavirus pandemic. The WikiLeaks Lockdown List contains free films and talks you can watch to learn more about WikiLeaks, Julian Assange, whistleblowing, activism and seeking justice. Share this list and support our campaign to free Julian Assange. Please take care of yourself and those around you during this time.

Editor’s Note: The playlist is huge

Downloads available at Don’t Extradite Assange – Playlist