San Francisco Chronicle

Britain seeking friendly resolution with Ecuador

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LONDON — Britain is seeking an amicable solution with Ecuador to their diplomatic standoff over WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, a British official said Saturday, as the secret-spiller prepared to make his first public statement since the Latin American nation confirmed it would offer him asylum.

Assange, who took shelter in the Ecuadoran Embassy on June 19 after he exhausted all routes of appeal in the United Kingdom to avoid extraditio­n to Sweden for questionin­g over sexual misconduct allegation­s, is scheduled to make a public statement Sunday.

London diplomats have spoken with Ecuadoran Ambassador Ana Alban since the South American country granted Assange asylum on Thursday, a move that threatens to further complicate Sweden’s twoyear long attempt to have the activist extradited from Britain.

British officials in Ecuador’s capital, Quito, have also contacted the country’s foreign ministry to discuss a resumption of talks over the case, and to quell anger prompted when Britain appeared to suggest it could invoke a little-known law to strip Ecuador’s embassy of diplomatic privileges — meaning police would be free to move in and detain Assange.

But there was little sign of a friendlier atmosphere Saturday from Quito, where Ecuadoran President Rafael Correa said on his weekly broadcast that Britain’s “direct threat” about possibly entering the embassy had come “in a totally offensive, inconsider­ate, intolerabl­e manner.”

He said Ecuador “never wanted to impede the investigat­ion of a supposed crime. What we wanted to impede is the extraditio­n to a third country.”

British diplomats have repeated assurances that the government was simply setting out the country’s legal options, not making a specific threat to storm the nation’s mission.

“We are continuing to seek a diplomatic solution,” a British government official said on condition of anonymity.

Assange, an Australian, shot to internatio­nal prominence in 2010 when his WikiLeaks website began publishing a huge trove of American diplomatic and military secrets — including 250,000 U.S. embassy cables that highlight the sensitive, candid and often embarrassi­ng backroom dealings of U.S. diplomats.

As he toured the globe to highlight the disclosure­s, two women accused him of sex offenses during a trip to Sweden.

Assange and his supporters claim the Swedish case is merely the opening gambit in a Washington-orchestrat­ed plot to make him stand trial in the United States over his work with WikiLeaks — something disputed by both Swedish authoritie­s and the women involved.

 ?? Carl Court / AFP / Getty Images ?? A sign in support of Julian Assange is held in front of the Ecuadoran Embassy in London, where the WikiLeaks founder has been holed up since June.
Carl Court / AFP / Getty Images A sign in support of Julian Assange is held in front of the Ecuadoran Embassy in London, where the WikiLeaks founder has been holed up since June.

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