Assange ran hacking from embassy: Moreno

Ecuador's president says Julian Assange hosted hackers at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to propagate information important to him and his financiers.

Ecuador's president has accused Julian Assange of hosting hackers at the Ecuadorian Embassy in London to give them directions on how to propagate information on topics important to the WikiLeaks founder and his financiers.

President Lenin Moreno said that Swedish programmer Ola Bini, who is in custody in Ecuador, was one of the hackers who visited Assange many times.

Bini lives in Quito and was detained last week just hours after Moreno evicted Assange from the embassy, allowing him to be arrested by British authorities.

Moreno said Bini hacked mobile phones and online accounts belonging to both private citizens and Ecuador's government.

In Quito earlier in the day, Bini's parents made an anxious plea for authorities to release their son while expressing confidence he did nothing wrong.

"Ola is a friend of Julian Assange, nothing more," said his father, Dag Gustafsson.

Assange had enjoyed asylum since 2012 at the embassy in London but relations between the silver-haired Australian and Ecuadorian officials had grown increasingly tense.

Moreno's government has accused Assange of creating conflict by meddling in international affairs, harassing staff and even smearing faeces on the embassy's walls.

Assange is in custody in London awaiting sentencing for skipping bail to avoid being sent to Sweden as part of an investigation into a rape allegation. The US is also seeking his extradition after charging him with conspiring to break into a Pentagon computer system.

Ecuador's president suggested Assange was able to operate equipment and collaborate with embassy staffers for a long time thanks to the support of Moreno's predecessor, Rafael Correa, who granted asylum to Assange.

"There are other answers that fit with someone's else money, which (this person) kept taking away from Ecuador in order to keep power and in order to go back to power," Moreno said without referring specifically to Correa at first.

But at a later point, Moreno said "the president" spends $US3 million a month to propagate his ideas and has been receiving money from the socialist government of Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro to perform economic studies. He did not specify an amount.

Ecuadorian Interior Minister Maria Paula Romo contends Bini travelled at least 12 times to meet with Assange at the London embassy.

Prosecutors have said they intend to charge Bini with hacking-related crimes and had him ordered detained for up to 90 days while they compile evidence.

Bini's father said his son works as a software developer for a non-profit group and has a "burning passion" for freedom of speech and online personal integrity issues. He said he is convinced his son is innocent and will remain in Ecuador until he is released.


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Published 17 April 2019 11:08am
Source: AAP


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