Julian Assange’s two children ‘conceived in Ecuadorian Embassy tent’
‘We found ways to be private’: Julian Assange’s fiancee reveals they conceived their two children in a camping TENT adorned with fairy lights inside the Ecuadorian embassy so that security cameras couldn’t see them
- Julian Assange’s fiancee Stella Moris revealed the couple shared private moments in a camping tent in his room inside the Ecuadorian embassy
- The South African-born lawyer began dating the Wikileaks founder in 2015
- The pair met a decade ago after she joined his legal team in his fight against his extradition to the US on espionage charges
- Moris revealed the couple’s sons, Gabriel, three, and Max, one, were conceived in a tent inside the embassy
The mother of Julian Assange‘s children has revealed how the couple was able to secretly conceive their two sons while he was hiding out at the Ecuadorian embassy in London.
South African-born lawyer Stella Moris is currently raising her two young boys, Gabriel, three, and Max, one, alone in the UK while their Wikileaks founder father continues to fight his extradition to the US.
The 49-year-old Australian is wanted on an 18-count indictment alleging a plot to hack computers and conspiracy to obtain and disclose national defense information.
Assange had been holed up at the Ecuadorian embassy in the UK since 2012 where he met Moris and began a relationship with her in 2015.
He was believed to be under constant surveillance however, Moris said the two managed to have intimate moments over the years while keeping their relationship under wraps.
‘We found ways to be private,’ Morris said in an interview with CBS News on Thursday.
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Stela Moris, who began dating Assange in 2015, revealed how the pair managed to keep their relationship – and her pregnancy – under wraps while he was hiding out at the Ecuadorian embassy in London
Moris, who is engaged to Assange, told CBS News the couple shared private moments in a ‘camping tent’ in his room, away from the CCTV cameras
‘We had a tent in his room that we put fairy lights in… you know, like a camping tent,’ she said, adding that the shelter kept them out of view from CCTV cameras.
The 37-year-old first met Assange almost a decade ago after she helped work on a legal bid to halt his extraditions.
Shortly after those private encounters at the embassy, Moris became pregnant with their first child in 2016, and again in 2019.
In an earlier interview with 60 Minutes, she revealed she was able to hide both her pregnancies from authorities and the media by layering clothes over her baby bump.
‘I just piled on layers [of clothes] and complained about getting fat to hide it,’ Moris said.
Due to the Assange’s arrest, the two boys have rarely seen their father since their birth, however Moris maintains he was ‘the man I wanted to start a family with.’
‘I was 33 and we decided, you know, let’s live our lives,’ she told the news station.
‘I try to give [the kids] as normal a feeling of a family as I can,’ she said, adding that the boys speak to their father every day.
The 37-year-old South African-born lawyer is now raising their two sons, Gabriel, three, and Max, one, alone as their father fights extradition to the US
‘I tell them that Julian is a hero. And I want them to just see our love and their father’s affection to the extent that we can.’
The couple became engaged in 2017 and their relationship was finally made public earlier this year by the Mail on Sunday after Morris told the paper Assange had secretly fathered two sons during his stay at the embassy.
She said she chose reveal their long-term relationship because she fears Assange’s life is at risk if he remains in Belmarsh Prison, where one inmate has already died of Covid-19.
Assange faces espionage charges over the leaking of hundreds of thousands of classified U.S. intelligence documents.
He was also wanted in Sweden after being accused of rape in 2010. Assange always denied the sex allegations, which have since been dropped.
The Wikileaks founder were granted political asylum by Ecuador in 2012 until April 2019 when he was dragged out and taken to prison. Pictured: The Ecuadorian embassy in London
Assange was granted political asylum by Ecuador in 2012 until April 2019 when he was dragged out and taken to prison.
Moris said she plans to marry Assange outside Belmarsh Prison in London’s outskirts by Christmas this year.
Moris is aware there is a chance the children will never be reunited with their father again.
She told the Sydney Morning Herald she would love to move to Australia as long as the government can protect her family.
‘I’ll live wherever he is safe and that’s why I want Australia to tell us that he will be safe there,’ she said.