WikiLeaks
may publish more revelations promised by Snowden – Assange
WikiLeaks
may publish further revelations promised by NSA leaker Edward
Snowden, Julian Assange hinted during a conference call with
journalists. He reiterated that his legal team is helping Snowden in
his quest for asylum in Iceland.
20
June, 2013
“I
feel a great deal of personal sympathy with Mr. Snowden,” the
WikiLeaks founder said, adding that he had been in touch with
Snowden’s lawyers.
"We
are in touch with Mr. Snowden's legal team and have been, are
involved, in the process of brokering his asylum in Iceland," he
said in a conference call from the Ecuadorian Embassy, where he
himself has been fighting his extradition to Sweden for nearly a
year.
When
asked if he had spoken directly with Snowden, the former CIA
contractor who fled to Hong Kong before disclosing the NSA’s PRISM
surveillance program, Assange declined to offer further details.
“As
a matter of policy, we don’t speak about investigations or upcoming
publications,” Assange repeated several times. At the same time, he
hinted that “significant material will be published in coming
weeks.”
It
was reported Tuesday that Snowden is seeking asylum in the Nordic
island-nation. The Icelandic government confirmed they had received
Snowden’s request through WikiLeaks spokesperson Kristinn
Hrafnsson.
Icelandic
Prime Minister Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson confirmed that Snowden’s
representative held “informal talks” with government officials to
sound out the possibility of the country granting him asylum.
The
PM declined to comment further, adding that the asylum request should
be filed in Iceland by Snowden himself.
Assange
said the US government is likely to charge the NSA leaker with
espionage.
“It
is clear to me at this stage that Mr. Snowden . . . is being very
aggressively pursued by the US national security sector, and there’s
an open question as to whether the journalists, Laura Poitras and
Glenn Greenwald, will be in the same position that I will be in in a
year’s time,” he said.
The
US has not yet filed a formal request for his extradition from the
Chinese territory
NSA leaks: Wikileaks' Assange asylum bid for Snowden
Wikileaks founder Julian Assange is trying to broker a deal that would see US surveillance programme leaker Edward Snowden granted asylum in Iceland.
20
June, 2013
Mr
Assange said he had been in touch with lawyers for Mr Snowden, who
fled to Hong Kong before the scandal broke.
Iceland's
PM said "informal discussions" had been held with an
intermediary of the ex-CIA contractor.
But
Sigmundur David Gunnlaugsson said Mr Snowden, 29, would need to be in
Iceland to apply for asylum.
Mr
Snowden, who most recently worked as a contract computer technician
for the National Security Agency (NSA), the US electronic spying
agency, has vowed to fight any extradition attempts by the US.
The
US has yet to file a formal request for his extradition from the
Chinese territory.
Fair
trial?
The
leaks, published in a series of articles this month in The Guardian
and Washington Post newspapers, revealed that US agencies had
systematically gathered vast amounts of phone and web data.
"We
are in touch with Mr Snowden's legal team and have been, are
involved, in the process of brokering his asylum in Iceland,"
said Mr Assange in a conference call from the Ecuadorean embassy in
London, where he himself is fighting extradition to Sweden.
Julian
Assange has been in Ecuador's embassy in London for a year
On
Monday, Mr Snowden said US officials had destroyed any possibility of
a fair trial by labelling him a traitor.
"The
US government, just as they did with other whistleblowers,
immediately and predictably destroyed any possibility of a fair trial
at home, openly declaring me guilty of treason," he wrote in a
live online chat.
Former
Vice-President Dick Cheney and two influential members of the US
Congress have accused the leaker of betraying his country.
Mr
Snowden's father has also urged his son not to commit "treason",
using a US TV interview this week to urge him to come home and "face
justice".
NSA
Director Gen Keith Alexander told Congress on Wednesday that
surveillance programmes leaked by Mr Snowden had helped thwart 50
attacks since 2001.
Plans
to attack the New York Stock Exchange were among 10 plots targeting
the US that had been stopped, Mr Alexander told the intelligence
committee of the House of Representatives, adding that the snooping
operations were critical.
Julian
Assange walked into the Ecuadorean embassy in London on 19 June 2012
when his appeal against extradition to Sweden for questioning on
accusations of sex crimes was turned down.
He
has always denied the accusations, and said on Wednesday he would
stay in the embassy even if they were dropped, as he still feared
being sent to the US for releasing secret documents.
Wikileaks
made headlines around the world in 2010 after it released more than
250,000 leaked US diplomatic cables.
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