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Lima (Peru): WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange described as nonsense reports of defections from his organisation and said his group helped inspire the Occupy Wall Street movement.
Addressing a meeting of the Inter American Press Association in Peru on Monday via Internet video hookup from Britain, Assange said WikiLeaks' biggest problem was the ban on processing contributions by credit card companies and PayPal.
"We have not cut any staff," he said, calling it "an exception for most of the newspaper world."
Though asked for specifics, he did not say how many people WikiLeaks had on staff or offer details about its finances.
"We have been pleasantly in a strong enough financial position to survive entirely on our cash reserves for the past eleven months," Assange said.
According to him, WikiLeaks expects to prevail in legal action it has taken in the European Union against corporations that blocked payments in 2010 after the online secrets-spilling organisation facilitated the release of tens of thousands of US diplomatic cables and sensitive documents from the Afghan and Iraq conflicts.
He said the burgeoning Occupy Wall Street movement, which blames corporate greed for the global financial crisis, "is in part inspired by our activities" and claimed "community support and media support for WikiLeaks has never been stronger."
On Saturday, the 40-year-old Australian spoke to protesters in London during one of scores of global Occupy Wall Street rallies, calling the international banking system a "recipient of corrupt money."
As for allegations WikiLeaks may be splintering or weakening, Assange said reports that circulated in 2010 about 12 people leaving the organisation were "absolute nonsense."
He said WikiLeak's sole defection was a German spokesperson he did not name. He was clearly referring to Daniel Domscheit-Berg, who Assange said he "suspended."
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