Boston Herald

Longtime lodger Assange gets Ecuador citizenshi­p

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QUITO, Ecuador — Ecuador has granted citizenshi­p to WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange after more than five years of living in asylum at the nation’s embassy in London, officials announced yesterday.

Foreign Minister Maria Fernanda Espinosa said officials accepted Assange’s request for naturaliza­tion in December, and they continue to look for a long-term resolution to a situation that has vexed officials since 2012.

“What naturaliza­tion does is provide the asylum-seeker another layer of protection,” Espinosa said.

Ecuador gave Assange asylum after he sought refuge in the embassy to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden for investigat­ion of sex-related claims. Sweden dropped the case, but Assange has remained in the embassy because he is still subject to arrest in Britain for jumping bail.

He also fears a possible U.S. extraditio­n request based on his leaking of classified State Department documents.

The Australian-born Assange posted a photograph of himself wearing a yellow Ecuadorean national soccer team jersey on Instagram Wednesday and his name now appears in the Andean country’s national registry.

The new citizenshi­p status appears to change little for Assange in the near term. He still must alert British authoritie­s of any movement outside the embassy.

“Even if he has two or three nationalit­ies, the United Kingdom will continue in its efforts against him,” said Fredy Rivera, an expert in foreign affairs at the Latin American Faculty of Social Sciences in Ecuador.

Britain’s Foreign Office said earlier yesterday it has rejected Ecuador’s request to grant him diplomatic status in the U.K. “Ecuador knows that the way to resolve this issue is for Julian Assange to leave the embassy to face justice,” the office said.

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