Grant political asylum to Julian Assange? The National Assembly on Friday debated a trans-partisan motion calling on the French government to grant refugee status to the founder of Wikileaks, with the key being the rejection of the executive and the majority.
Examined as part of a day devoted to the opposition group Libertés et Territoires, the text defended by the deputy Jennifer de Temmerman had only a symbolic significance because it was not binding.
He nevertheless received the support of presidential candidates, the communist Fabien Roussel and the “Insoumis” Jean-Luc Mélenchon, environmental deputies, centrists of the UDI, a socialist and a handful of elected officials. of the majority.
The examination of this resolution took place a few days following the agreement between the assembly and the senate around a bill by Modem deputy Sylvain Waserman for better protection of whistleblowers in France.
Despite the vehemence and lyricism of pro-Assange speakers, MPs voted once morest the resolution by 17 votes in favor and 31 once morest.
“Today is a victory. We are giving a voice back to those who no longer have one”, however greeted Ms. de Temmerman regarding Mr. Assange imprisoned in the United Kingdom since 2019 following spending seven years in the embassy. London from Ecuador where he had taken refuge.
He then feared extradition to the United States, or Sweden where he was the subject of rape proceedings since abandoned.
Julian Assange is claimed by the American justice which charged him under the anti-espionage laws. He faces 175 years in prison for having allowed the publication of tens of thousands of confidential documents, in particular on American operations in Afghanistan and Iraq.
“He denounced barbaric acts and unspeakable blunders that had to be made public”, greeted the communist Stéphane Peu.
For Jean-François Mbaye (LREM), “no human rights defender can tolerate such a disproportionate situation” but even if “the intention is noble”, the deputy from Val-de-Marne highlighted the “contentious points” of the resolution, particularly of a legal and diplomatic nature.
Same story on the side of the Minister of Foreign Trade Franck Riester whom Alexis Corbière (LFI) criticized for only giving a “legal framework” without ever mentioning “Julian Assange”.
His LFI college François Ruffin deplored French “cowardice” while environmentalist Cédric Villani wanted to make the patriotic rope vibrate: “France will only be respected if it speaks loudly.”