 For more videos on people's struggles, please subscribe to our YouTube channel. What this prosecution is doing is making it illegal to tell the truth about government wrongdoing, about government corruption, about torture, about crimes against humanity, about war crimes. I'm Gabriel Shipton, I'm Julian Assange's brother. Governments want to operate in the dark. They don't want people to know what they're doing in their land and this prosecution is helping them do that. They're making an example of Julian so that everyone around the world can see if you tell the truth about what's going on, this is what's going to happen to you. Your life will be ruined, you will be locked in a prison forever with no end in sight, your reputation will be destroyed. So yeah, I think it's already happening. We're already seeing now that the executive editors of the New York Times, of the Washington Post have all come out saying that these are great threats of press freedom and that these charges should be dropped and what that means is that in these newspapers they're already seeing the implications. They're getting security stories or stories about security state but they cannot publish. So it's espionage acts from 1917, they tried to charge Daniel Ellsberg with it and it didn't work but it's after 9-11 it's been increasingly used against whistle-blowers, people who work inside the government who give information to the press but this is the first time it's ever been used against a journalist. If you read the indictment, it's quite obvious that the charges are for receiving and publishing classified information. So that's something that journalists do every day. So it's basically a criminalisation of journalism, criminalisation of investigative journalism and basically a criminalisation of telling the truth basically. There was a judgement handed down by the High Court on Friday, they approved the extradition of Julian Sange to the US to face espionage, 17 charges under the espionage act for publishing the Chelsea Manning leaks, the Iraq war logs, the Afghan war diaries, the State Department cables and Guantanamo Bay detainee files. You think it's strange because it is strange, it is like how can a foreign publisher be extradited to the United States. So it's this extraterritorial reach that they're trying to apply laws, United States laws, into other territories around the world and silence. They're setting an example really, around the world, people, all these authoritarian regimes now look at the US and say, well, this is the example that we can follow. We can persecute journalists. They look at Saudi Arabia, they look at Jamal Khashoggi, they look at Julian and say, well, our biggest ally does this, so can we.