Putin:
Snowden can stay in Russia if he stops damaging USA
President
Vladimir Putin says NSA leaker Edward Snowden may stay in Russia, if
he wants to, but only if he stops activities aimed against the United
States.
RT,
26
January, 2013
“There
is one condition if he wants to remain here: he must stop his work
aimed at damaging our American partners. As odd as it may sound from
me,” Putin told a media
conference in Moscow.
In
Putin’s opinion, Snowden considers himself “a
fighter for human rights”
and it seems unlikely that he is going to stop leaking American
secret data.
However,
Russia is not going to extradite Snowden, the president underlined.
“Russia has never
extradited anyone and is not going to do so. Same as no one has ever
been extradited to Russia,”
Putin stated.
“At
best,”
he noted, Russia exchanged its foreign intelligence employees
detained abroad for “those
who were detained, arrested and sentenced by a court in the Russian
Federation.”
Snowden
"is not a Russian agent", the president said, repeating
that Russian intelligence services were not working with the fugitive
American.
He
said Snowden should choose his final destination and go there. Putin
added that he has no idea when that is going to happen.
“If
I knew, I would tell you now,”
he told the media conference after the Forum of Gas Exporting
Countries.
Putin
and his US counterpart Barrack Obama instructed their nations’
security services – Russia’s FSB and America’s FBI respectively
- to resolve the situation around the Snowden case, Nikolay
Patrushev, the secretary of the Russian Security Council said earlier
on Monday.
The former CIA employee Snowden, who is behind the
biggest leak in the NSA, has been stuck in the transit zone of
Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport for over a week now, after he arrived
in the Russian capital from Hong Kong.
The US annulled the
whistleblower’s American passport and he presently has no other
documents with which he can travel.
Putin
does not rule out that the US was bugging Russian diplomatic
missions. The President was commenting on a scandal stirred up by new
documents leaked by Snowden which revealed that the US was spying on
dozens of foreign missions and embassies abroad.
“It’s
none of our business that allies are eavesdropping on each other. Let
them do what they want,”
Putin stated.
He
observed that there was nothing in the leaked data on attempts to bug
official Russian representations.
“I
don’t rule out that it’s possible,”
Putin noted.
The
US special services work on a global scale, but they also have “some
kind of departmental interests.”
“Let
our colleagues [special services] decide which of them is right and
which is wrong and what should be done to stop it,”
Putin concluded.
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