Ecuador has partially restored Julian Assange's communications in their London Embassy after UN officials met with Ecuador's president, Lenin Moreno on Friday, reports the Belfast Telegraph.
On September 7, 2018, a 2011 ruling by the Ecuadorian Constitutional Court ordering American oil company Chevron to pay $9.5 billion in damages to afflicted Ecuadorian villagers was overturned by the International Arbitration Court in The Hague, putt
On September 7, 2018, a 2011 ruling by the Ecuadorian Constitutional Court ordering American oil company Chevron to pay $9.5 billion in damages to afflicted Ecuadorian villagers was overturned by the International Arbitration Court in The Hague, putt
RT's editor-in chief ...Ecuador is ready to hand over the WikiLeaks founder to the UK in "coming weeks or even days," RT editor-in-chief Margarita Simonyan said citing her own sources, as prospects of his eviction from the embassy are back in th
These long summer days are good for forest walks or swimming; in the evenings, I read classics with my 10 year old son who otherwise spends too much time at video games.
WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange may have overstayed his welcome at the Ecuadoran embassy in London, where his situation is "unusually bad" and he could be forced out "any day now," according to a report on Friday.
Julian Assange has been barred from communicating with the outside world for more than three weeks. On March 27, the government of Ecuador blocked Assange's internet access and barred him from receiving visitors other than his lawyers. Assange has
The Ecuadorian government has confirmed that it keep protecting Australian cyber activist Julian Assange, who has remained in asylum since 2012 at the Quito embassy in London, the Foreign Ministry confirmed today.
Last weekend, a tribunal held by indigenous communities in Gualaquiza, in the Amazon headwaters region of Ecuador, accused the nation's first large scale mining operation of major human and environmental abuses.
"Chevron has probably spent more money trying to weasel out of this case than any corporation in world history," Greenpeace co-founder Rex Weyler said.
The small city of Cuenca, Ecuador is struggling to address a growing wave of American "Baby Boomers" who have decided to retire there to take advantage of a socialist welfare state designed for its locals.