 Ladies and gentlemen, thank you for coming. Just a brief statement. This is young Oropacus. He's from the end of 25. We've just spent the last two hours with Julian. For the life of me, I can't understand why Julian Assange is in jail. Having committed no crime, the family here that he can come and live with that a bail ought to be given immediately if the extradition order isn't locked. Now, Julian has a harassment today. He goes to court tomorrow and they searched himself this afternoon just before he came down to see us. This plain malice that emanates from the Crown Prosecution Service to Julian Assange must stop immediately. So, thank you very much. I came here to visit my great friend and fight him for prescription for you folks. Because you are on Donald Trump's hit list next week. I came here to give him courage and I ended up receiving a lot of strength from him. Julian is in a very dark place. You have to publicize this. He's in a solitary confinement. Today, for instance, he will spend 22 hours of his own in the cell. The only two hours of the 24 hour cycle that he's not going to spend on his own was with us. When he sees people like us today, he doesn't even get the half hour or 30 minutes of exercise in an enclosed space. He doesn't even get that. For six months he's been asking for, as a prisoner, his right to exercise in the gymnasium with the other prisoners. He has been denied that. So how is he? He's a force of nature. Because I can tell you that I would not be able to even open my mouth and utter a single sentence. His mind is working overtime. He's constantly thinking of the medics of the case. It really does not matter what you and I think about Julian Assange. He's only being charged with journalism. The only reason why he's in there is because he embarrassed those who committed crimes against humanity, war crimes. People who are out there profiting, not just being free, but profiting, while the person who exposed them allowed the international media, the liberal media to know what happened in Afghanistan, to know what happened in Iraq. That person is now rotting in there. We have to stop this extradition in the interest of 300 years of modernity. 300 years of trying to establish human rights and civil liberties in the West, around the world. Thank you. This is the report with our borders. I can... The question is not, are you part of the family or not? Do you like Julian Assange or not? The question is that tomorrow, in this courtroom, journalism will be in danger. Because if Assange would be extradited to the US, it would be the sign that journalism is considered as espionage. And it would endanger all journalists who want to cover the lives of governments, whatever the country. In Iraq, in Afghanistan, in other countries. And of course, this is a question of press freedom. What happens here goes beyond the question of an individual fate. We have also to say that Assange has been politically and legally persecuted. And that he has to stop now. And that he needs to enjoy the solidarity of journalists. Because this is the future of journalism that will be in danger tomorrow. Anybody who wants individual interviews, we can do a few now.