A document agreed at the Union of South
American Nations meeting in Ecuador said it supported the country "in the
face of the threat" to its London embassy, where he has taken refuge.
The UK has said it could potentially lift
the embassy's diplomatic status.
Mr Assange faces extradition to Sweden over
sexual assault claims he denies.
Ecuador's President Rafael Correa has
suggested Mr Assange could co-operate with Sweden if assurances are given that
there would be no extradition to a third country.
Supporters of Mr Assange - who on Sunday
urged the US to end its "witch-hunt" against the Wikileaks site -
claim he could face persecution and even the death penalty if sent there.
'Explicit threat'
After Ecuador's Foreign Minister Ricardo
Patino finished reading the final declaration from the Union of South American
Nations (Unasur) summit, he joined hands with his fellow foreign ministers and
raised them aloft.
The BBC's Will Grant said it was a a
symbolic but important show of unity in a region which considers the UK
government's approach over Mr Assange to have been colonialist and threatening.
Ecuador has described a letter from the
British government drawing attention to the Diplomatic and Consular Premises
Act 1987 as "intolerable" and an "explicit threat".
Mr Assange called on the US to stop its
"war on whistle-blowers"
The act could allow the UK to lift the
diplomatic status of Ecuador's embassy in London to allow police to enter the
building to arrest Mr Assange for breaching his bail terms.
Mr Assange has been at the embassy since 19
June. Five days earlier, the UK's Supreme Court dismissed his bid to reopen an
appeal against his extradition to Sweden.
He had been on bail while the case was
being considered and, after the Supreme Court result, was given a further
two-week grace period.
It is an established international
convention that local police and security forces are not permitted to enter an
embassy, unless they have the express permission of the ambassador.
That principle was backed by the ministers
at the Unasur summit. In their final document, they agreed on a series of general
principles, including as "the inviolability of local diplomatic missions
and consular offices".
'War on whistle-blowers'
Our correspondent said that - in the
context of the UK's perceived heavy-handed approach to the recent question of
Argentina's renewed claim over the Falkland Islands - the British government's
reputation in South America was undoubtedly being affected by this stand-off.
But the last point of agreement in the
Unasur document called for calm, urging the parties involved to "continue
the dialogue and negotiation to find a mutually acceptable solution".
On Sunday, Mr Assange, 41, used his first
public statement since entering the embassy - delivered from a balcony - to
call on the US to stop its "war on whistle-blowers".
The US is carrying out an investigation
into Wikileaks, which has published a mass of leaked diplomatic cables,
embarrassing several governments and international businesses.
In 2010, two female ex-Wikileaks volunteers
accused Mr Assange, an Australian citizen, of committing sexual offences
against them while he was in Stockholm to give a lecture.
Mr Assange claims the sex was consensual
and the allegations are politically motivated.
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