She added that the whistleblower could count on the group if he wished to go to France.
UK district judge Vanessa Baraitser ruled on Monday not to extradite Assange to the U.S., citing health reasons and the risk of suicide in the U.S. prison system but did not release him from the Belmarsh high-security prison where he is detained.
Following his arrest at the Ecuadorean embassy in April 2019, Assange was sentenced to 50 weeks in prison for skipping bail.
After he served his time, the UK court ruled that he should remain in prison until the extradition case ends.
“According to the law, and the 2003 extradition treaty between the USA and Great Britain, Julian Assange is free since the judge pronounced and published the word ‘discharge’ and not adjournment.
“There is no reason to keep him in detention,” Karbowska, who was in the court on Monday, said.
On Wednesday, Julian Assange’s legal team is making an appeal for his temporary release from prison.
Monika Karbowska is going to be present at the Westminster Magistrate Court.
“At 12:25 p.m. from the moment the word ‘discharge’ was pronounced, Julian Assange should have left through the front door of the Old Bailey and gone wherever he wanted.
“He is no longer being prosecuted by anyone, neither by a court in the United States nor by the United Kingdom for that matter.
“His detention is arbitrary. It is even more of a hostage situation since someone is now demanding a bail for his freedom which looks like a ransom,” she continued.
On Tuesday, UN Special Rapporteur on torture and other cruel, inhuman, or degrading treatment Nils Melzer said Assange must be immediately released from the high-security prison in the United Kingdom.
Melzer said in a statement that Assange should also be compensated for the abuses he had suffered.
“I will be at the Westminster Magistrate Court.
“We are fighting for Julian Paul Assange to be released without any bail/ransom and without having to prove a residence address in England and without being dependent on a guarantor or relationship in England.
“We are putting pressure on him to walk free through the front door of the Westminster Court and I would like to speak to him to inform him that if he wishes we are prepared to help him come to France legally.
“Simply on the basis of his Australian passport or a flat is already waiting for him,” Karbowska said.
She noted the court must also give him back his passport, the proof of his identity.
She, however, expressed doubts whether any valid identity document in the name of Julian Assange had ever been produced, and if none existed, he must urgently be provided with one.
The U.S. government has already announced that it will continue to seek Assange’s extradition to try him for the publication of classified information that exposed war crimes committed by the U.S. military in Iraq and Afghanistan.
A U.S. Department of Justice spokesman also said they were “extremely disappointed” by the decision made by UK district judge Vanessa Baraitser, so the prosecution would appeal the ruling at London’s High Court, meaning that the extradition case will be in UK courts for months.
“The extradition treaty does not provide for an appeal, moreover, there is no appeal since it is not a verdict but a refusal of extradition pronounced by a sovereign State.
“Even if this court makes a second extradition request, it will not be an appeal from the first, but a new request,” Karbowska said. – Sputnik/NAN
– Jan. 6, 2021 @ 6: 06 GMT /