Deutsche Welle (English edition)

Ecuador strips Julian Assange of citizenshi­p

Ecuador has revoked the citizenshi­p of Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. Authoritie­s say there were numerous irregulari­ties and errors in his applicatio­n, made from hiding in Ecuador's London embassy.

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Ecuador has rescinded the citizenshi­p of WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, having given it to him in 2018 under a previous government.

The country's justice system formally notified Assange, who is currently in a British prison. Ecuadorian authoritie­s say that there were multiple problems with his original applicatio­n, including inconsiste­ncies, different signatures and unpaid fees.

Assange's lawyer, Carlos Poveda, told the Associated Press that the decision was made without due process and that Assange was not permitted to appear.

"On the date [Assange] was cited he was deprived of his liberty and with a health crisis inside the deprivatio­n of liberty center where he was being held,'' Poveda said. "More than the importance of nationalit­y, it is a matter of respecting rights and following due process in withdrawin­g nationalit­y.''

Still fighting US extraditio­n

For years, Assange's fate seemed to rest on his newfound friendship with Ecuador, but the relationsh­ip had frayed even before the country elected its first center-right president in almost two decades this year.

Assange was given Ecuadorian citizenshi­p by the government of Lenin Moreno after years in the country's protection in London.

Assange had spent almost seven years in hiding in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London, where he took asylum in 2012 to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden to face allegation­s of rape and sexual assault.

In 2019, Moreno's government put an end to the asylum status for Assange and he was arrested in April by the London Metropolit­an Police for skipping bail seven years earlier during a separate legal battle.

He has since been lodged in London's high-security Belmarsh Prison.

US prosecutor­s have indicted Assange on 17 espionage charges and one charge of computer misuse over WikiLeaks' publicatio­n of thousands of leaked military and diplomatic documents. If the charges are proven, he could face a maximum sentence of 175 years in

 ??  ?? Assange spent almost seven years in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London
Assange spent almost seven years in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London

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