US
spy leaker Edward Snowden 'missing' in Hong Kong
An
ex-CIA employee who leaked details of US top-secret phone and
internet surveillance has disappeared from his hotel in Hong Kong.
BBC,
11
June, 2013
Edward Snowden, 29, checked out from his hotel on Monday. His whereabouts are unknown, but he is believed to be still in Hong Kong.
Earlier,
he said he had an "obligation to help free people from
oppression".
It
emerged last week that US agencies were gathering millions of phone
records and monitoring internet data.
A
spokesman for the US Office of the Director of National Intelligence
said the case had been referred to the Department of Justice as a
criminal matter.
Meanwhile
a petition posted on the White House website, calling for Mr
Snowden's immediate pardon, has gathered more than 30,000 signatures.
However
an opinion poll commissioned by the Washington Post suggests a
majority of Americans think government monitoring of phone records is
acceptable if the aim is to fight terrorism.
Transatlantic
fallout
Hong
Kong's broadcaster RTHK said Mr Snowden checked out of the Mira hotel
on Monday.
Reuters
news agency quoted hotel staff as saying that he had left at noon.
Ewen
MacAskill, a Guardian journalist, told the BBC he believed Mr Snowden
was still in Hong Kong.
The
Chinese territory has an extradition treaty with the US, although
analysts say any attempts to bring Mr Snowden to America may take
months and could be blocked by Beijing.
Mr
Snowden was revealed as the source of the leaks at his own request by
the UK's Guardian newspaper.
He
is believed to have arrived in Hong Kong on 20 May. A standard visa
on arrival in the territory for a US citizen lasts for 90 days.
His
revelations have caused transatlantic political fallout, amid
allegations that the UK's electronic surveillance agency, GCHQ, used
the US system to snoop on British citizens.
Foreign
Secretary William Hague cancelled a trip to Washington to address the
UK parliament on Monday and deny the claims.
Mr
Snowden is described by the Guardian as an ex-CIA technical
assistant, currently employed by Booz Allen Hamilton, a defence
contractor for the US National Security Agency (NSA).
He
told the newspaper: "The NSA has built an infrastructure that
allows it to intercept almost everything. With this capability, the
vast majority of human communications are automatically ingested
without targeting.
Mr
Snowden said he did not believe he had committed a crime: "We
have seen enough criminality on the part of government. It is
hypocritical to make this allegation against me."
But
he admitted that he could end up in jail and feared for people who
knew him.
'Core
values'
In
a statement, Booz Allen Hamilton confirmed Mr Snowden had been an
employee for less than three months.
"If
accurate, this action represents a grave violation of the code of
conduct and core values of our firm," the statement said.
At
a daily press briefing on Monday, White House press secretary Jay
Carney said he could not comment on the Snowden case, citing an
ongoing investigation.
The
first of the leaks came out on Wednesday night, when the Guardian
reported a US secret court ordered phone company Verizon to hand over
to the NSA millions of records on telephone call "metadata".
The
metadata include the numbers of both phones on a call, its duration,
time, date and location (for mobiles, determined by which mobile
signal towers relayed the call or text).
On
Thursday, the Washington Post and Guardian said the NSA tapped
directly into the servers of nine internet firms including Facebook,
Google, Microsoft and Yahoo to track online communication in a
programme known as Prism.
All
the internet companies deny giving the US government access to their
servers.
Prism
is said to give the NSA and FBI access to emails, web chats and other
communications directly from the servers of major US internet
companies.
The
data is used to track foreign nationals suspected of terrorism or
spying. The NSA is also collecting the telephone records of American
customers, but said it is not recording the content of their calls.
US
director of national intelligence James Clapper's office said
information gathered under Prism was obtained with the approval of
the secret Foreign Intelligence Surveillance Act Court (Fisa).
Prism
was authorised under changes to US surveillance laws passed under
President George W Bush, and renewed last year under Barack Obama.
Mr
Obama has defended the surveillance programmes, assuring Americans
that nobody was listening to their calls.
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