Venezuela
confirms receipt of Snowden asylum request
Venezuelan
President Nicolas Maduro has confirmed that his country received an
official request for asylum from NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden on
Monday. This comes after Nicaragua received his asylum application at
its Moscow embassy.
RT,
8
July, 2013
“We
received a letter requesting asylum” from Snowden, revealed Maduro,
during a press conference prior to a meeting with Panama’s
president, Ricardo Martinelli.
The
fugitive "will need to decide when he will fly here," added
the Venezuelan head of state.
Maduro
Maduro last week said that his country would provide Snowden with a
safe haven from "persecution from the empire."
Earlier
on Monday Nicaragua confirmed that it also received Snowden's
official asylum request. “Nicaragua is an open country that
respects the right to asylum,” the country's ambassador to Russia
Luis Alberto Molina Cuadra told RT
“It
is possible that Snowden’s application is already being looked at.
It will be considered at the highest level, by the top politicians of
our country.”
On
Friday Nicaragua’s Sandinista President Daniel Ortega declared that
he would receive the US citizen “with pleasure”, if
“circumstances permit”.
Snowden’s
initial application letter, with the dateline “Moscow, June 30”
has also been revealed.
In
it the former National Security Agency (NSA) contractor says “…it
is unlikely I would receive a fair trial or proper treatment [in the
US]” and claims an imminent return to his country of birth could
result in the “possibility of life in prison or even death.”
Snowden,
who last month leaked confidential information revealing NSA’s
massive electronic surveillance program, known as PRISM, is currently
facing charges of theft of government property, and two counts of
espionage – one for leaking classified to data to those without a
security clearance.
The 30-year-old has
not been seen in public since late June in Hong Kong, but is widely
believed to be in the transit zone at Moscow’s Sheremetyevo
airport.
He
is believed to have submitted asylum applications to at least 21
countries, but his current options have been whittled to down to
three Latin American states, as others have either rejected him, or
demand that he first travel to the country, without guaranteeing that
his application will be successful.
On
Monday, Uruguay’s first lady, Senator Lucia Topolansky, said that
her country would consider giving asylum to Snowden, RIA Novosti
reports. “This issue should be considered, once a request is
filed,” Topolansky said. “Uruguay has traditionally been a
country that grants asylum. I think that every country is free to
shelter whomever it wants."
“Every
country has its own rules and makes its own decisions, and no one is
allowed to interfere with the sovereignty of other nations,” she
added.
When
US security sources presumably ascertained that the fugitive computer
programmer might be on the plane of Bolivian President Evo Morales
leaving Moscow last Tuesday, four European countries shut their
airspace, forcing the Latin American leader to make an emergency
landing in Austria, where officials reportedly searched the aircraft.
Following
the diplomatic incident, which prompted an emergency council of South
American states, Morales has also offered Snowden asylum.
If
Snowden were to travel out of Moscow on a scheduled flight, he would
likely have to make a changeover in Cuba. Leader Raul Castro has said
that he supports Snowden’s application, but made no mention of
whether the country would offer asylum, or simply safe passage.
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