Pamela Anderson and Julian Assange have a special relationship. This has been known ever since the Baywatch star wrote a public love letter to the Wikileaks founder. "I can not forget this man," it said. Title: "Why my husband is Julian".

Assange fled to the Ecuadorian embassy in London in 2012 to avoid extradition to Sweden for rape allegations. Since then he remains there. Although the lawsuit was filed in Sweden - but legal consequences threaten in the US; in the UK there is a warrant for his arrest.

In Pamela Anderson, the 47-year-old has a prominent advocate. In early November, she defended Assange in an interview with the Australian program "60 Minutes". Australia is the home of Assange. "Give Julian his ID and bring him back to Australia and be proud of him, host a parade in," Anderson said on the show to Australian Prime Minister Scott Morrison.

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Anderson's Assange Mission: Special Ambassador for Pamela?

But the head of government gave her a rebuff. A journalist from Australian TV broadcaster SBS broadcast a radio clip on Twitter. When asked if he wanted to organize a parade for Assange, Morrison said, "No," and you hear him laugh. "I have many buddies who asked me if they could clarify the matter as a special envoy with Pamela."

Prime Minister Scott Morrison's #JulianAssange interview with Hot Tomato - "I've had plenty of mates who have asked me if they can not come up with Pamela Anderson's" issue # pic. twitter.com/LFiwuyBkWK

- Brett Mason (@BrettMasonNews) November 6, 2018

That could not leave Anderson that way. In an open letter, she accused Morrison of having laughed at and trivialized the suffering of an Australian. He made "dirty, unnecessary" comments about a woman expressing her political opinion.

Australian Senator Kristina Keneally agreed with Anderson. She tweeted that men should stop using the sexuality and appearance of a woman to denigrate her arguments.