Ecuador's President Rafael Correa on Tuesday denied on Twitter that his country had decided to grant political asylum to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange. “The rumor about Assange's asylum is false. There is as yet no decision on the issue,” Correa wrote on Twitter. “I am expecting a report from the Foreign Ministry.” On Monday, Correa told a local television station that he would meet on Wednesday with the team in charge of legal analysis of Assange's case in order for the country to continue examining the request of asylum before making a “responsible and independent decision.” Britain's The Guardian reported on Tuesday that Ecuador was set to grant Assange asylum, citing a diplomatic source in the Ecuadorian capital Quito. “The only spokesmen on the Julian Assange issue are President Rafael Correa and Foreign Minister Ricardo Patino. Ecuador is still studying the request, the authorities will make an announcement,” Deputy Foreign Minister Marco Albuja had said on Twitter. Having taken refuge in the Ecuadorian embassy in London since June 19, Australian-born Assange pleaded the South American country for political asylum after his legal team's attempts to fight his extradition to Sweden failed. Assange is wanted in Sweden for sexual assault accusations against him by two women. But he insists that the Swedish authorities actually plan to hand him over to the United States, which wants to try him on charges of espionage for leaking thousands of secret US diplomatic cables. If convicted, he could face death penalty. The EU has a policy that bars country's from handing over suspects who could potentially face the death penalty in another country. Correa had earlier said his government would make a decision on the issue once the London Olympic Games was over.