London - A British private surveillance company denied on
Thursday that it had bugged the Ecuadorean embassy in London, where WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange has been living for over a year.
Ecuador’s Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino made the allegation
against the Surveillance Group Ltd in Quito on Wednesday, adding that Ecuador
would seek help from the British government to get to the bottom of the matter.
In a statement, the Surveillance Group’s CEO Timothy Young
rejected Patino’s allegation as “completely untrue”.
“The Surveillance Group do not and have never been engaged
in any activities of this nature,” Young said.
“We have not been contacted by any member of the Ecuadorean
government and our first notification about this incident was via the press
this morning,” he said.
The Foreign Office in London declined to comment.
Patino described the Surveillance Group as “one of the
biggest private investigation and undercover surveillance companies in the
United Kingdom”.
On its website, the company says it combines “the practices,
skills and experience of special forces, police and commercial surveillance to
create an entirely new form of surveillance”.
It says its clients include British law enforcement
agencies, other government bodies and financial institutions, and that it has
teams in Europe and Canada.
Services on offer include digital forensics, corporate
investigations, professional witness surveillance and intelligence reports,
according to the company website.
Patino has said the microphone was found in the office of
Ambassador Ana Alban at the time of his visit to the embassy on June 16 to meet
with Assange, who has been granted asylum by Ecuador but cannot make his way to
that country.
Assange risks arrest if he steps out of the embassy because
he has breached his bail terms in Britain. He sought refuge inside the embassy
in June 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden to face allegations of rape and
sexual assault.
Assange fears that if sent to Sweden he could be extradited
from there to the United States to face potential charges over the release of
thousands of confidential U.S. documents on WikiLeaks.
The anti-secrecy website described the alleged bugging of
the embassy as an example of “imperial arrogance” but did not elaborate.
The topic of covert state surveillance has been at the top
of the global news agenda since a series of leaks last month by former U.S.
National Security Agency contractor Edward Snowden about secret U.S. and
British espionage programs.
WikiLeaks is trying to assist Snowden, who is believed to be
stranded at an airport in Moscow and seeking asylum in a variety of countries
including Ecuador.
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