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US Denies it Urged Ecuador to Unplug Assange's Internet Access

The United States on Tuesday denied charges from WikiLeaks that Washington asked Ecuador to cut the internet connection of the website's founder Julian Assange.

WikiLeaks on Monday alleged that Assange's internet access was cut Saturday after the anti-secrecy published private speeches by Democratic presidential nominee Hillary Clinton to Goldman Sachs.

Assange has been staying at the Ecuadoran embassy in London since 2012 to evade prosecution by Sweden over a rape allegation.

In a series of tweets beginning late Monday, the anti-secrecy website said it learned from "multiple US sources" that Ecuador cut off Assange's internet connection at the behest of US Secretary of State John Kerry. 

State Department spokesman John Kirby, in a brief statement, denied that Washington had played any role in the move.

"While our concerns about WikiLeaks are longstanding, any suggestion that Secretary Kerry or the State Department were involved in shutting down WikiLeaks is false," Kirby said. 

"Reports that Secretary Kerry had conversations with Ecuadorian officials about this are simply untrue. Period."

The State Department also denied a WikiLeaks tweet alleging that "multiple US sources tell us John Kerry asked Ecuador to stop Assange from publishing Clinton docs during FARC peace negotiations" -- a conversation alleged to have taken place on the sidelines of the Colombia-FARC peace agreement signing September 26.

"That's just not true," said State Department deputy spokesman Mark Toner. "(Kerry) didn't even engage with President (Rafael) Correa when he was on the ground in Colombia. They had no meeting."

"No one in the State Department has attempted to engage with the Ecuadorian government on this particular matter."

On Saturday, WikiLeaks published three private, paid speeches Clinton made to Wall Street investment giant Goldman Sachs, after she left her position as secretary of state and before launching her White House bid.

Clinton's campaign team, which has not contested the authenticity of the documents, has blamed the Russian government for the hacks, and accused WikiLeaks of seeking to help Clinton's Republican rival for the presidency Donald Trump.

Source: Agence France Presse


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