'Betray Snowden, betray freedom’: Hong Kong, Washington rallies embrace NSA leaker
‘
RT,
15
June, 2013
Hundreds
marched in Hong Kong to demand protection for Edward Snowden, who
leaked revelations of US electronic surveillance and is now believed
to be holed up in the city. The demonstration came hours after a
similar action was staged in Washington, DC.
Chinese
protesters, made up of 27 civil society organizations, marched to the
American consulate, holding banners bearing Snowden's image and
reading “Betray Snowden, betray freedom”, “Safeguard freedom of
speech, protect Snowden”, and "No Extradition" in both
Chinese and English.
The
protesters handed over a letter addressed to US Consul General Steve
Young slamming the violation of human rights exposed by the ex-NSA
officer.
Protesters
hold placards as they march to the US consulate in support of Edward
Snowden from the US in Hong Kong on June 15, 2013. (AFP
Photo/Philippe Lopez)
“For
many years, the US State Department has publicly supported the cause
of internet freedom and criticized other governments for conducting
cyber-attacks, surveillance and censorship,” the statement says.
“We now understand, through recent revelations, that the US
government has been operating their own blanket surveillance systems
and allegedly conducting cyber warfare against Hong Kong. This is a
violation of Human Rights of people of Hong Kong and around the
world.”
In
an interview with Hong Kong's main English-language newspaper the
South China Morning Post on Wednesday, Snowden maintained that among
the 61,000 targets hacked by the NSA there were hundreds in Hong Kong
and mainland China.
One
of the organizers of the protest a democratic legislator Claudia Mo
told AP that "His war is essentially one of security versus
privacy and freedom and that governments must draw a line of how far
they could go. They can't claim national security as the umbrella
excuse, the umbrella reason and authoritarian governments can just do
anything they want to in the cyberspace.”
Protesters
hold placards as they march along the US consulate in support of
former US spy Edward Snowden in Hong Kong on June 15, 2013. (AFP
Photo/Philippe Lopez)
There
were American citizens who joined protests in China. Like Drew
Gibson, a protester from New York.
"Snowden
did absolutely the right thing,” Gibson said. “He had insider
knowledge of these surveillance programs, and I think at a great
personal risk he was willing to expose this to the world. I don't
think he would benefit from this in any way.”
"Today
we all blow the whistle," shouted Tom Grundy, a British blogger
and activist who lives in Hong Kong, France 24 reports.
Kwazi
Nkrumah speaks while joining protesters rallying outside the U.S.
Capitol against the NSA's recently detailed surveillance programs
June 13, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Win McNamee/Getty Images/AFP)
Earlier,
outrage has been building in the opposite part of the world. Outside
Capitol Hill in Washington, a couple of dozens of protesters were
warned that their gathering had not been authorized and therefore was
unlawful, so all those rallying without a permit would be subject to
arrest.
Protesters
in Washington voiced their concern about unchecked government powers.
“We’re
supposed to address our grievances to our government, this is one of
the biggest scandals ever – and we’re not allowed to do that –
what does that say?” one of the protesters told RT.
“I
think these discussions about Snowden are really a distraction. What
we need to be focusing on isn’t what he did was lawful. It is
whether or not what the agency did was lawful,” one woman said.
“What
we do or don’t do as a society about this massive accumulation of
power through the control of information about people’s personal
and social lives, gathered on every digital electronic device
marketed to us,” a man addressing the meeting said.
Protesters
rally outside the U.S. Capitol against the NSA's recently detailed
surveillance programs June 13, 2013 in Washington, DC. (Win
McNamee/Getty Images/AFP)
The
cyber stand-off between the US and China has heating up over the last
months amid accusations made by Washington of Chinese hackers
stealing vital information from American companies. It turned out,
though, that it was Washington that organized a total surveillance
programs enabling the US administration to gather information on any
living human being, be it an American or a Chinese citizen.
A
former contract employee at the National Security Agency, Snowden
revealed to The Guardian and Washington Post newspapers confidential
information on secret US surveillance programs that gathers any
digital data, from phone calls to file storage, on practically any
person living on our planet. Snowden, 29, was last time seen in Hong
Kong.
The
US authorities have launched a criminal investigation into Snowden’s
actions and he is being currently sought by both the NSA and CIA,
most likely to be charged with treason.
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