Wikileaks founder Julian Assange awarded Dignity Prize from Catalans
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is being kept in a prison cell for up to 23 hours a day, but that has not stopped him from winning an award for raising the plight of the Catalans.
Despite Wikileaks founder Julian Assange being kept in his prison cell for up to 23 hours a day in London’s high security Belmarsh jail, it has not stopped him winning a major award.
The Catalan Dignity Commission has honoured him with its 2019 Dignity Prize for raising awareness around the world about the plight of the Catalans in the lead up to the 2017 independence vote.
Announced on Friday, the prize recognises his efforts to correct misreporting of events and to provide live video updates to the world of the peaceful Catalan protesters and the brutal crackdown on them by Spanish police.
The advice Assange gave to Catalans on how to use apps to avoid Spanish Government shut downs was also acknowledged.
The prizes which began in 2002, reward, symbolically, the people and organisations who have worked towards protecting Civil Rights and heightening historical memory and democratic values in any area of public life.
Assange’s mother Christine said “This deeply meaningful Dignity Award from the Catalan Dignity Commission in gratitude for Julian’s courageous journalism, recognises the essence of his belief and practice, that a fierce free, truthful and independent media holding Governments and other powerful entities accountable to the people, is the most important protection we have to defend freedom and democracy.”
Assange, who was at the time under the protection of the Ecuadorean Government and living in the Embassy in London, responded to the despair of Catalans when the Spanish Government disabled voting apps, by tweeting instructions on how Catalan citizens could use other apps to find out information about voting. Millions of people were able to vote as a result.
He also tweeted information about the historical background to the struggle for independence by the Catalans, giving context to the referendum vote.
Ms Assange said people were glued to his twitter account watching the live updates.
Assange himself maintained he was not taking sides on whether Catalonia should secede or not, only that peaceful legal democratic processes should be respected.
He undertook to help the Catalans despite the risk it would create his own problems with the Ecuadorean Government.
As a result, Assange’s support for the democratic process led to a backlash from Spain sparking concerns within Ecuador’s government.
Soon after Assange’s internet connection was cut off and his access to visitors stopped.
Assange has a long a history of helping people get access to internet services. At age 23 he founded one of the first internet provider services in Australia, the non-profit Suburbia, run by volunteers to help underprivileged people get internet access.
Ms Assange said her son also spent a lot of time visiting community groups to show them how to use the internet.
“He has always cared about people having access to information, and believes in core values that underpin freedom and democracy”.
Assange helped the Catalans while he was still detained without charge inside the Ecuador Embassy, and prevented by a 24/7 police guard which blocked him from taking up his legal political asylum in Ecuador.
He was granted asylum in 2012, to protect his life and liberty from US threats.
Assange, an Australian citizen, is facing 175 years prison if extradited to the US and convicted on espionage charges.
The unprecedented prosecution relates to the publication of documents provided to WikiLeaks by whistleblower Chelsea Manning.
Assange attracted the attention of the United States when Wikileaks and several media outlets published hundreds of thousands of secret US documents and a video about the war in Iraq and Afghanistan which contained evidence of war crimes.
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https://www.news.com.au/national/wikileaks-founder-julian-assange-awarded-dignity-prize-from-catalans/news-story/207b2f05fbff34175570411b349c9a93