Snowden
plans to settle and work in Russia – lawyer to RT
RT,
26
January, 2013
NSA
leaker Edward Snowden plans to settle in Russia and is ready to begin
a court battle if the country’s migration service denies his asylum
plea, Anatoly Kucherena, a Russian lawyer who assists the
whistleblower, told RT.
“It’s
hard for me to say what his actions would be in terms of a positive
decision [on the asylum plea],” Kucherena said. “We must
understand that security is the number one issue in his case. I think
the process of adaptation will take some time. It’s an
understandable process as he doesn’t know the Russian language, our
customs, and our laws.”
“He’s
planning to arrange his life here. He plans to get a job. And, I
think, that all his further decisions will be made considering the
situation he found himself in,” he added.
Kucherena
expressed hope that the whistleblower’s plea will be granted,
because the reasons which prompted Snowden ask for political asylum
in Russia “deserve attention.”
“He
fears for his health and his life. He’s afraid that if he’ll be
handed to the US, torture can be used against him down to death
penalty,” he said.
In
case of a negative ruling on the plea, Kucherena said that Snowden
has “an opportunity to go to court and appeal against the decision
of the Federal Migration Service.”
“He
intends to do so,” the attorney stressed. “During our meeting,
our dialogues, and our consultations, he made detailed inquiries on
those procedures. And I informed him of what possibilities he has
according to Russian law.”
Snowden
still remains holed up in the international transit zone of the
Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport. His asylum plea, which was filed on
July 16, has not been yet formalized by migration officials.
“According
to the existing practice, it may take five, seven, or eight days. I’m
calling them on a daily basis. They tell me that they’re about to
finish the formalization,” Kucherena said.
The
NSA leaker will then be handed a paper confirming that his asylum
application is being reviewed. Once this document is received,
Snowden will be allowed to leave the airport where he has spent an
entire month.
“There
are no travel restrictions. Therefore, receiving the paper will give
him an opportunity to leave the transit zone of the Sheremetyevo
airport and choose a place of residence – rent a hotel or a flat.
[He can] live in any place within the Russian federation,”
Kucherena explained.
According
to the lawyer, consideration of the plea will then take up to three
months. If his request is approved, Snowden will receive a
certificate which will “guarantee him the same rights and freedoms
possessed by the citizens of the Russian Federation.”
“The
temporary asylum is given on a one-year term. After it expires, the
term can be prolonged for another year and this can be repeated an
indefinite number of times afterwards,” he said.
Snowden
arrived in Moscow from Hong Kong on June 23 after revealing secret
NSA government surveillance programs to the public.
The
30-year-old whistleblower is wanted in the US on charges of espionage
and theft of government property.
Several
Latin American states have offered him asylum, but the whistleblower
believes it is unsafe for him to leave Russia following the July 2
incident in which the Bolivian president’s plane was grounded on
suspicion that Snowden was aboard the craft.
THERE
ARE TWO CLEAR MESSAGES FROM THIS -- The first is the Vladimir Putin
has stood up to to the United States in an irrevocable. all-in
position.
The
second is that, on this entire troubled and transforming planet, only
Russia is capable of doing this.
Think
about it.
Long
live Russia... Viva!
---Mike
Ruppert
Russia
set to 'grant NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden political asylum'
despite America's calls for his arrest
- Snowden, 30, is expected to be allowed temporary Russian visa while his asylum application is formally considered
- He has been inundated with offers from Russian women of a home and marriage
23
July, 2013
Russia
is poised to announce it is freeing US whistleblower Edward Snowden
from his airport transit zone hideaway in Moscow, allowing him into
the country, it is believed.
The
intelligence leaker has applied to the Kremlin for temporary
political asylum after the US blocked his travel routes out of
Russia.
Snowden,
30, who has been inundated with offers from Russian women of a home
and marriage, may have already left Sheremetyevo Airport, where he
has been living for a month since fleeing Hong Kong after the US
called for him to be arrested, several unconfirmed Russian reports
said on Tuesday.
He
is expected to be allowed a temporary Russian visa while his asylum
application is formally considered.
In
Russia, Vladimir Putin has refused to hand him over to America but
has also made clear he does not want Snowden to become an issue
destabilising relations with Washington.
The
American wants to make a permanent home in exile in South America but
the US has called on countries he would overfly or transit to arrest
him and hand him to the US authorities.
A
spokesman at the Air Express transit hotel said Tuesday: 'He is not
here.'
His
lawyer Anatoly Kucherena said last night: 'As far as I know, Snowden
is in Sheremetyevo's transit zone.'
Putin
has denied his secret services are tapping the former CIA employee
for his intelligence knowledge.
'I
am receiving calls from people who ask me to convey their offers of
help. Most of the girls are offering Snowden a home and marriage, and
men are offering financial support,' said Kucherana.
Among
those offering marriage by tweet was glamorous Russian spy Anna
Chapman, expelled by the US after being arrested on espionage charges
in New York.
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