Pamela Anderson visits exiled Wikileaks founder Julian Assange FIVE times the last four months sparking romance rumours
PAMELA Anderson has visited WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange five times in the last four months at the Ecuadorian embassy in London - sparking speculation that the pair could be romantically involved.
The Baywatch star has even been seen bringing him food, and a source observed that Anderson "seems to be wearing sexier outfits every time she visits".
Anderson was seen visiting Assange on October 15, November 13, December 7, December 12 and January 21.
On one occasion, she was seen carrying a Whole Foods bag and is thought to have been bringing him shopping.
And she has also brought him a sandwich from Pret A Manger.
Assange has been living in the embassy for four years after he was granted political asylum by Ecuador.
He is due to be questioned over sexual assault allegations in Sweden - which he denies - but fears if he leaves he will be extradited to the United States for his involvement in WikiLeaks campaigns.
Pamela was introduced to Assange by Vivienne Westwood in August 2014, and sought advice from him about her new animal rights charity.
Since then she has visited him in his embassy 'cell' multiple times.
The former Baywatch star said: "I really believe in him and think he's a good person, and I'm concerned about his health, his family, and I just hope that by some miracle he's set free.
"I brought him a nice vegan lunch and some vegan snacks." She then joked: "He said I tortured him with bringing him vegan food".
Pamela set up The Pamela Anderson Foundation at the start of 2014 to help environmental causes and to protect vulnerable people and animals.
She has also campaigned to raise awareness for organisations such as PETA and Mercy For Animals, and joined initiatives to protect the Arctic, combat deforestation and condemn the force feeding of ducks and geese in the production of foie gras.
Assange has recently come under fire for WikiLeaks' heavy involvement in the US election.
Critics berated the controversial character for allegedly helping Trump to power by exposing thousands of shady emails sent by his rival Hillary Clinton.
In a statement, Assange claimed releasing the emails was bound to attract criticism but was ultimately better for the public.
He said: "WikiLeaks remains committed to publishing information that informs the public, even if many, especially those in power, would prefer not to see it.
"WikiLeaks must publish. It must publish and be damned."
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