Snowden
faces execution as sealed complaint charges espionage
RT,
21
June, 2013
US
federal prosecutors have charged whistleblower Edward Snowden with
espionage, theft and conversion of government property in a sealed
criminal complaint, and asked Hong Kong to detain him ahead of a move
to extradite him.
Though
the criminal complaint is sealed, charges of espionage and theft are
undoubtedly based on Snowden’s extraction of classified documents
from NSA servers, which led to the publication of several articles
regarding the NSA’s PRISM program, which is alleged to harvest
private user data through cooperation with a slew of American
corporations including Facebook, Yahoo, Google, Apple and Microsoft.
The
specific details of how Snowden transported the classified NSA
documents are somewhat unclear, with The Guardian saying they were
extracted using four laptops taken to Hong Kong, though subsequent
reporting has pointed to the use of a basic USB thumb drive.
Removable media such as thumb drives are banned for use on SIPRNET,
the Defense Department’s secret network.
Federal
prosecutors have now laid the groundwork for Snowden’s extradition
back to the US for trial, and have 60 days to file an indictment. The
US currently has an extradition treaty with Hong Kong, though that
treaty includes an exception for crimes of a political nature.
The
29-year-old former intelligence analyst flew to Hong Kong last month,
having been in contact with journalists at The Washington Post and
The Guardian newspapers regarding a series of highly classified
documents regarding a massive electronic surveillance program run by
the US National Security Agency that he had acquired and intended to
leak.
Washington
has now asked Hong Kong’s government to detain Snowden on a
provisional arrest warrant, according to officials who spoke with the
Post. Though the territory is considered a “semi-autonomous”
region under Chinese sovereignty, it is unclear whether the matter
will be handled solely by Hong Kong’s legal system with or without
intervention from Beijing.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: only a member of this blog may post a comment.