The editor in chief of WikiLeaks claimed Wednesday that his organization has uncovered a “Truman-show-like” spying operation against founder Julian Assange — within the Ecuadoran embassy.

Kristinn Hrafnsson said photos, documents video and audio recordings chronicling Assange’s every step in the embassy were recently sent to WikiLeaks by “Spanish individuals.”

The group first began receiving material a few weeks ago and has been communicating with one of the individuals since, he said.

Calling the operation a “total invasion of privacy,” Hrafnsson said WikiLeaks believed some of the private data collected was “quite likely shared with the Trump administration” in relation to a “secret indictment” that US prosecutors accidentally revealed last year.

He did not provide additional evidence for his claims.

Assange fled to the embassy into 2012 to avoid questioning by Swedish police in relation to a sexual assault accusation.

His relationship with the Ecuadorean government was already on thin ice after last week, when Ecuadoran President Lenin Moreno accused him of violating the terms of his asylum by spying on his family, implying that WikiLeaks had hacked into his phone and spread his private info, including private photos of his wife and children.

Hrafnsson said the push to evict Assange from the embassy “has been escalating” over the past weeks and days.

If Assange is forced out, he faces extradition to the United States or immediate arrest by British police.