nils melzer chris hedges RT interview
© RT
The UN rapporteur on torture told RT about the fanciful excuses Western media used to avoid publishing his damning op-ed on the extreme pressure Julian Assange was exposed to - despite covering every wild allegation against him.

A host of reputed Western media outlets turned a deaf ear to Nils Melzer and his op-ed in which he said Julian Assange was exposed to enormous psychological trauma and isolation while in the Ecuadorian Embassy, and afterwards in the UK high-security prison.
Some of them said it wasn't high enough on their news agenda, some of them said it wasn't within their core area of interest.



Comment: So press freedom and the protection of journalists is not a "core interest" of these outlets? That pretty much tells one everything about the true nature of the Western media


The explanations seem awkward given that the same newspapers - the Guardian, the Times, the Washington Post, the Telegraph, and others - have been running news stories about Assange "when it was about his cat and his skateboard and... allegations that he smeared excrement on the walls."
But when you have a serious piece that actually tries to de-mask this public narrative and to actually show the facts below it, then they're not interested.
In his piece, which was eventually published on blogging website Medium, Melzer admitted he "had been blinded by propaganda" and didn't believe Assange was being dehumanized through isolation, ridicule, and shame. He even asked himself how could "life in an Embassy with a cat and a skateboard ever amount to torture."

"I didn't know Assange, so I took with me experienced medical experts, a psychiatrist and a forensic expert that have worked for decades in examining torture victims," he told RT.

These experts, he said, found that Assange showed "all the symptoms that are typical for a person who has been exposed to prolonged psychological torture."
He has been exposed to public mobbing. Now, that's the slippery slope... When you start exposing an isolated individual who can't defend himself to a sustained campaign of humiliation, of shame, of ridicule, even death threats, then it can cause severe psychological trauma.
Melzer visited Assange in May, and called for an end to the "collective persecution" of the WikiLeaks co-founder afterwards. "I have never seen a group of democratic States ganging up to deliberately isolate, demonize and abuse a single individual for such a long time and with so little regard for human dignity and the rule of law," Melzer wrote at the time.