On probation, he had met the love of his life, he married her a decade later behind bars: Julian Assange, the founder of WikiLeaks, married Wednesday March 23 with the woman who was once his lawyer, Stella Moris, at the British maximum security prison.

He continues to hope to avoid extradition to the United States, despite the dismissal of the British Supreme Court. 

The union took place in the early afternoon at Belmarsh prison, in south-east London, in a small committee with only four guests and two witnesses, including the two brothers and the father of Julian Assange. 

They want to strip #JulianAssange of all dignity and support a false narrative to stop the fight for his freedom.

#WeAreAllAssange #JournalismIsNotACrime #AssangeWedding #FreeAssangeNOW https://t.co/KIHfwIZkpO

—Admirators (@Site_Admirators) March 23, 2022

But outside, the atmosphere was festive, the few dozen supporters of the founder of WikiLeaks drinking champagne, dancing or calling on the microphone for his release.

A mounted piece topped with figurines of the bride and groom had been prepared, and confetti thrown at the bride, who had left without her new husband. 

“Thank you”, said Stella Moris after the ceremony, saying to herself both “happy” and “sad”, because “what we are going through is cruel”.

"He is a most extraordinary person" and "he should be free", she added.  

Caught in a long legal saga, the 50-year-old Australian is wanted by the American justice system, which wants to try him for the dissemination, from 2010, of more than 700,000 classified documents on American military and diplomatic activities, in particular in Iraq and Afghanistan.

Prosecuted in particular under legislation against espionage, he faces 175 years in prison, in a case denounced by human rights organizations as a serious attack on freedom of the press.

"Slow Torture" 

Stella Moris arrived wearing a silver gray wedding dress, designed by Vivienne Westwood, and accompanied by the two little boys she had with Julian Assange, in kilts and white shirts.

On her veil were embroidered the words "free", "noble" and "tumultuous".

The British designer, very committed to the release of Julian Assange, also designed the kilt worn by the groom – in reference to his Scottish origins.

Among the supporters gathered around the prison, who had hung yellow ribbons saying "Journalism is not a crime" or "Free hostage Assange now", Londoner Sadia Kokni, 41, considers that the founder of WikiLeaks "has only exposed the truth" and that his detention is a form of "slow torture".

Pulitzer Prize-winning American journalist Chris Hedges has called for an end to "injustices" against Julian Assange, at the center "of the most important battle for press freedom of our time".

Denouncing in the Guardian "political persecution" and "arbitrary detention", Stella Moris criticized the prison authorities for having refused the proposed witnesses and the presence of a photographer so that Julian Assange "remains invisible to the public eye at all costs , even on her wedding day.

"Political Affair" 

On March 14, Julian Assange saw one of his last hopes of avoiding his extradition disappear, with the refusal of the British Supreme Court to examine his appeal.

His partner, a 30-year-old South African lawyer, has since begged British Home Secretary Priti Patel, who has the decision to approve his extradition, prevent it and put an end to this "political affair".

Julian Assange and Stella Moris first met in 2011, when the lawyer was hired to join the legal team fighting his extradition.

Their engagement was announced in November 2021.

The young lawyer had two children with Julian Assange, conceived when he lived at the Ecuadorian embassy in London, where he had found refuge for seven years until his arrest in April 2019. 

He then feared extradition to the United States, or Sweden where he was the subject of rape proceedings, since abandoned.

With AFP

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