Ecuador's Correa 'Afraid for Julian Assange's Safety'
"It
will only take pressure from the United States to” withdraw
protection for Assange said Correa.
Former
Ecuadorean president Rafael Correa has warned that WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange's days are numbered at the Ecuadorean Embassy in
London.
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Correa,
who gave Assange asylum back in 2012, said that he's “afraid for
Julian Assange's safety” due to the new government´s actions with
regards to his case. He said that he believes President Lenin Moreno
is likely “take away the support” previously afforded to the
anti-secrecy activist.
“It
will only take pressure from the United States to” withdraw
protection for Assange and “surely it's already being done, and
maybe they await the results of the Feb. 4 (referendum) to make a
decision,” said Correa, in an article published by AFP.
When
asked does he have evidence to support his claim, Correa said it's
clear that Moreno “has no convictions, it's clear that he has
yielded to the usual powerbrokers” and will “soon enough yield
regarding the question of Assange.” The 54-year old economist added
that the ambassador for the United States was shamelessly interfering
in Ecuador's internal affairs, something “hadn't occurred during
ten years” of his government.
Earlier
this week Correa officially left the ruling PAIS Alliance, the
leftist political movement he founded in 2006 and which he first rose
to political prominence.
Having
referred to Moreno as a “traitor,” someone who has called for an
“unconstitutional” referendum that could spell an end to
“democracy,” Correa went on to say that "they can rob us of
Alianza Pais, but never our will and convictions. Despite the pain,
this only strengthens us." More than two dozen other leaders and
lawmakers have also resigned from the party, including Mauricio
ProaƱo, Liliana Duran, and Esteban Melo.
The
departing faction intends to start a new party called Citizens'
Revolution, the phrase Correa often uses to describe his socialist
movement aimed at reducing the nation's inequality.
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