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Julian Assange: WikiLeaks founder sues Ecuador government for violating his 'fundamental freedoms'

Move comes despite transparency campaigner accepting shelter in country's UK embassy

Tom Embury-Dennis
Friday 19 October 2018 11:08 EDT
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Julian Assange sues Ecuador government for violating his 'fundamental freedoms'

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Julian Assange is suing Ecuador’s government for violating his “fundamental rights and freedoms”, despite the fact he is still being sheltered in the country’s UK embassy.

The move comes several months after Ecuador cut off communications for Mr Assange, and just days after it emerged it has set new house rules for the WikiLeaks founder, including a ban on making political statements.

WikiLeaks lawyer Baltasar Garzon has arrived in Ecuador to launch the case, which is set to be heard in a domestic court next week.

WikiLeaks said Ecuador had threatened to remove the protection Mr Assange has had since being granted political asylum, and added that his access to the outside world had been “summarily cut off”.

Mr Assange fears being extradited to the US if he leaves the embassy.

WikiLeaks said the government of Ecuador refused a visit by Human Rights Watch general counsel Dinah PoKempner, who has likened Ecuador’s isolation to “solitary confinement”, and had not allowed several meetings with his lawyers.

Ecuadorian president Lenin Moreno says embassy will continue to protect Julian Assange

A statement said: “Ecuador’s measures against Julian Assange have been widely condemned by the human rights community.”

Mr Assange’s lawyers said they were also challenging the legality of the Ecuadorian government’s “special protocol”, which makes his political asylum contingent on “censoring” his freedom of opinion, speech and association.

The protocol also requires journalists, his lawyers and anyone else seeking to see Julian Assange to disclose private or political details, such as their social media usernames and the serial numbers and codes of their phones and tablets, with Ecuador – which the protocol says the government may “share with other agencies”.

The protocol claims the embassy may seize the property of Mr Assange or his visitors and, without a warrant, hand it over to UK authorities, said the statement.

WikiLeaks said a US congressmen had written an open letter to Ecuador’s president, Lenin Moreno, saying that in order to advance “crucial matters … from economic cooperation to counternarcotics assistance, to the possible return of a USAID mission to Ecuador, we must first resolve a significant challenge created by your predecessor, Rafael Correa – the status of Julian Assange”.

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Pressure has mounted on Ecuador to hand Mr Assange over to the UK, WikiLeaks believes.

It is understood that the theme of the legal action will be on Mr Assange’s isolation, ban on visits, speech restrictions, and failure to live up to international obligations.

Additional reporting by PA

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