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Ecuador to let Assange stay at embassy

Ecuador's new president Lenin Moreno has labelled Julian Assange a "hacker" but says for human rights reasons he can stay at his country's London embassy.

Julian Assange
Ecuador's new president says Julian Assange can stay on in the country's London embassy. (AAP)

Ecuador's new leftist president Lenin Moreno says Julian Assange is a "hacker," making his strongest comments to date against the WikiLeaks founder while still stressing he can stay on in the country's London embassy.

Moreno, who was sworn in earlier this month, has broken with his predecessor and mentor Rafael Correa, who had said Assange was a "journalist" and granted him asylum in London in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden over rape allegations.

Last week Swedish prosecutors dropped their investigation into the allegations but British police said Assange would still be arrested for skipping bail if he left the Ecuadorean embassy where he has been holed up for five years.

Assange feared Sweden would hand him over to the US to face prosecution over WikiLeaks' publication of thousands of classified military and diplomatic documents in one of the largest information leaks in US history.

During the campaign, Moreno had already taken a tougher stance on Assange, warning him "not to intervene in the politics" of countries friendly to Ecuador.

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"Mr Assange is a hacker. That's something we reject, and I personally reject," Moreno told journalists on Monday.

"But I respect the situation he is in, which calls for respect of his human rights, but we also ask that he respects the situation he is in."

Assange dodged an eviction order in Ecuador's April election, after the right-wing candidate who had vowed to kick him out of the embassy lost to Moreno.

Still, the tight presidential election highlighted just how vulnerable Assange is should a new government be ushered in.


2 min read

Published

Source: AAP



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