Bolivian
leaders’ emails hacked by US - Morales
The
US is prying into emails of top Bolivian officials, said Evo Morales,
the Bolivian president, who admitted he has terminated his email
account in light of the revelations.
RT,
14
July, 2013
Morales
said he learned about the alleged US email spying at the Mercosur
regional summit in Montevideo that was held earlier this week, AFP
reported.
"Those US intelligence agents have accessed
the emails of our most senior authorities in Bolivia,
Morales said in a speech.
"It was recommended to
me that I not use email, and I've followed suit and shut it down,"
he added.
Morales’ accusation of US email spying is just the
latest scandal to emerge between US and Latin American officials in
the wake of the Snowden affair.
Argentine Foreign Minister
Hector Timerman told the same summit that more than 100 of his
country's officials were also under electronic surveillance.
He did
not say what country he believed was responsible for the spying.
The accusations come just one week after Morales’
presidential plane, which was returning from Russia, was banned from
European airspace and forced to land in Austria in the belief that
NSA leaker Edward Snowden, who is presently in Moscow, was on board.
Bolivian
President Evo Morales boards his plane prior leaving the Vienna
International Airport on July 3, 2013 (AFP Photo / Patrick Domingo)
Bolivia
asserts that it was US officials who were behind the decision to
ground Morales’ aircraft.
During the Mercosur summit, Brazil,
Argentina, Venezuela and Uruguay showed allegiance with Bolivia,
saying the incident violated international law.
As a result,
ambassadors from the five major Latin American countries will be
recalled from France, Spain, Portugal and Italy, the four EU
countries that closed their airspace to Morales’ plane.
Bolivia
has joined Venezuela and Nicaragua in offering asylum to Edward
Snowden, 30, the former systems analyst for the US National Security
Agency (NSA) who released top-secret information on a ‘data-mining’
global surveillance system, called PRISM, which reportedly collects
and stores communications on friends and enemies alike.
Snowden,
who has been in Moscow since June 23, recently expressed his desire
to receive asylum in Russia, pledging to adhere to Moscow’s
condition that he not attempt to further “damage”
the United States.
Washington says the leaks threatened
national security, insisting the secret programs are legal and have
helped prevent a number of terrorist attacks.
Meanwhile,
Morales renewed his offer of asylum to Snowden on Saturday, saying
his country would follow all "diplomatic norms and
international accords" in
the case.
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