Ecuadorian President Lenin Moreno has accused WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange of repeatedly violating the conditions of his seven years of asylum in Ecuador's embassy in Britain.

In a speech to the Ecuadorian Broadcasting Association on Tuesday, Moreno accused the whistleblowing organization of intercepting phone calls and private conversations and also complained about “photos of my bedroom, what I eat, and how my wife and daughters and friends dance.”

“Mr. Assange has violated the agreement we reached with him and his legal counsel too many times,” Moreno said. “It is not that he cannot speak and express himself freely, but he cannot lie, nor much less hack private accounts or phones.”

While Moreno did not explicitly blame Assange for the hacked calls and provided no evidence, his remarks reflected ongoing tension between Assange and Ecuadoran officials.

The Ecuadorean government, however, has said it believes the WikiLeaks organization shared the photos that depict a lavish lifestyle and date back several years, to when Moreno and his family lived in Geneva, The Guardian reports.

WikiLeaks, in a statement, called Moreno’s charges “completely bogus,” saying it reported on accusations of corruption against the president only after Ecuador’s legislature investigated the issue.

“If President Moreno wants to illegally terminate a refugee publisher’s asylum to cover up an offshore corruption scandal, history will not be kind,” WikiLeaks said in a statement.

Assange, 47, took refuge in the embassy in London 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden for questioning about rape allegations. Although the Swedish investigation was dropped last year, Assange still faces charges in Britain for jumping bail.

Assange, an Australian national, chose to remain in the embassy out of fear that the United States would immediately seek his arrest and extradition over the leaking of classified documents to WikiLeaks by then-U.S. Army soldier Chelsea Manning.

Assange told The Telegraph in 2013 that he lives in a small office room converted into living quarters, equipped with a bed, telephone, sun lamp, computer, shower, treadmill and a small kitchenette.

The Ecuadoran authorities last year, for the second time, cut off Assange's access to the internet because of concerns that he was damaging the country's ties to Britain and other European nations, purportedly by criticizing Spain's handling of its separatist movement.

It also required Assange to pay his medical bills and clean up after his pet cat.

Assange, who was granted Ecuadorian citizenship last year in an apparent effort to designate him a diplomat and allow him to go to Russia, sued Ecuador for violating his rights as an Ecuadorian.

He pressed his case in local and international tribunals on human-rights ground, but both ruled against him.

The leftist Ecuadorian government that offered asylum to Assange had been embroiled in a diplomatic row with the U.S. involving a leaked U.S. diplomatic cable.

U.S. ambassador to Ecuador Heather Hodges was expelled after WikiLeaks leaked the document that alleged widespread corruption within the Ecuadorian police force, the BBC reported.