Ecuador's
Correa: Solution for Edward Snowden's destination 'in hands of
Russia'
Ecuador
President Rafael Correa says Russia will decide the destination of
former US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, currently believed to
be holed up at Moscow's Sheremetyevo Airport. seeking safe passage to
Ecuador after leaving Hong Kong.
RT,
30
June, 2013
"At
this moment, the solution of Snowden's destination is in the hands of
Russian authorities,"
Correa said in an interview with the private Oromar channel,
according to AFP.
"We
have not sought out this situation. Snowden is in contact with
[WikiLeaks founder Julian] Assange, who recommended he seek asylum in
Ecuador,"
Correa stated.
Meanwhile, President Putin's Press Secretary
Dmitry Peskov said on Sunday that Snowden's fate is not on the
Kremlin's agenda.
He said that Vladimir Putin had already
voiced his take on the issue on Tuesday, when he confirmed that
Snowden was in Moscow indeed, as a transit passenger, and rejected
the US demands for the leaker’s extradition.
“We
can only extradite foreign citizens to such countries with which we
have signed the appropriate international agreements on criminal
extradition,”
Putin said, adding that as Snowden had committed no crime on Russian
soil, he is free to travel at will.
"Snowden
is a free person. The sooner he chooses his final destination, the
better it is for him and Russia,"
he stated.
"On top
of this,"
Peskov went on, "the
president pointed out that he is not tackling this issue and prefers
appropriate services to deal with it. Therefore, this subject matter
is not on the Kremlin agenda."
"Given
that it's not our issue, I don't know what kind of further
development of the events and which legal and other aspects of the
subject matter could follow. I can neither say anything, nor explain
or give an appraisal,"
Peskov added.
Washington wants the 30-year-old Snowden, who
faces espionage charges, over his leaking of details about the
National Security Agency’s (NSA) dragnet telephone and internet
surveillance programs.
'Decision
ours to make'
WikiLeaks
founder Julian Assange, who has been residing in the Ecuadorian
Embassy in London for over a year, said during a conference call with
the media broadcast by RT that Snowden had been given special refugee
documents by the Ecuadorian government which facilitated his travel
to Russia. But the country's top Foreign Ministry official said on
Wednesday that Ecuador has not granted Edward Snowden any refugee
documents.
Correa also said that he didn't authorize travel
documents that the diplomats in the Ecuadorian Embassy in London
issued to Snowden. He explained that London consul Fidel Narvaez gave
the document to Snowden, "exceeding
his authority in doing so."
"[Narvaez]
will be punished,"
Correa promised.
U.S.
Vice President Joe Biden (AFP Photo / Drew Angerer)
On
Saturday US Vice-President Joe Biden "cordially"
asked Ecuador not to grant asylum to former US spy agency contractor
Edward Snowden, according to Correa. He said his country will make a
decision based on sovereignty.
Biden initiated the phone call,
Correa said, mentioning that Biden's good manners were in sharp
contrast to "those badly
behaved and confused ones in the Senate who threaten our country,"
and who had promised to cut off Ecuador's trade benefits in response
to Snowden's asylum request.
"He
communicated a very courteous request from the United States that we
reject the [asylum] request,"
Correa recalled.
In
Correa’s weekly broadcast on state TV, the staunch critic of the
US, said he vowed to respect Washington's opinion in evaluating
Snowden's request, should the whistleblower arrive in Ecuador.
However, his country cannot begin processing the request unless the
National Security Agency leaker reaches Ecuador.
Correa
explained that "when he
[Snowden] comes to Ecuadoran soil, if in fact he ever does, and we
have to process the request, the first people whose opinion we will
seek is that of the United States."
"Just as we did in
the Assange case with England [sic], we are going to listen to
everyone but the decision would be ours as a sovereign nation,"
he added, according to AFP.
"The
really grave thing is what Snowden has reported," AP
quoted Correa as saying.
"He
will have to assume his responsibilities, but the grave thing is his
reporting of the biggest massive spy operation in the history of
humanity, inside and outside the United States."
Correa
said that while he doesn't want "to
harm his country" he
is "not
going to give up on the principles and the sovereignty" of
Ecuador.
US
Senator Robert Menendez, who heads the Foreign Relations Committee in
the Senate, warned earlier this week that Ecuador’s stance in
Snowden's case could hurt the country's international trade, which is
highly dependent on exports to the US.
"Our
government will not reward countries for bad behavior," the
influential US lawmaker said.
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