Edward
Snowden warns of government spying in first Russia video
Moscow:
US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden warned of dangers to democracy
in the first video released of the fugitive since Russia granted him
temporary asylum in August.
NDTV,
12
October, 2013
"If
we can't understand the policies and programmes of our government we
can't grant our consent in regulating them," Snowden said in one
of the short video clips posted on the WikiLeaks website Friday
night.
The
anti-secrecy group said the videos were filmed Wednesday when Snowden
met with a group of four retired US ex-intelligence workers and
activists now seeking to promote ethics within the profession.
Snowden,
a former National Security Agency computer administrator, is wanted
in the United States for espionage and other charges after leaking
details of vast US telephone and Internet surveillance programs.
Dressed
in a black suit and blue shirt with no tie and looking at ease,
Snowden reiterated the dangers of NSA surveillance, saying
indiscriminate spying was a "far cry" from legitimate
programmes.
"It's
a sort of dragnet mass surveillance that puts entire populations
under a sort of eye that sees everything, even when it's not needed,"
he said.
"People
all over the world are realising that these programmes don't make us
more safe, they hurt our economy, they hurt our country, they limit
our ability to speak and think and live and be creative, to have
relationships, to associate freely."
The
videos show Snowden and the four former US government employees
chatting and smiling over dinner at a luxurious room in an
unidentified location.
During
the evening, former ex-CIA analyst Ray McGovern gave Snowden an award
-- a symbolic candlestick -- that acknowledges integrity in the
profession.
"We
are confident that others with similar moral fibre will follow his
example in illuminating dark corners and exposing crimes that put our
civil rights as free citizens in jeopardy," WikiLeaks quoted
McGovern as saying.
Also
present were a beaming WikiLeaks employee Sarah Harrison, a British
national who has accompanied Snowden since he arrived in Russia, and
his Russian lawyer Anatoly Kucherena.
One
of the attendees, former Department of Justice ethics advisor
Jesselyn Radack, said Snowden looked "very healthy."
"He
was funny and engaging, he did not seem worried, he did not seem to
have lost weight or appear pale or sick in any kind of way," she
said in televised remarks, predicting that more people might follow
his example.
"I
really think he's had a wonderful effect for the US and for the
world," she said. "Courage is contagious."
The
30-year-old spent over a month stuck in transit at Moscow's
Sheremetyevo airport before being granted asylum on August 1 despite
repeated protests from Washington.
Since
then his whereabouts have been a mystery. His pro-Kremlin lawyer
Kucherena says Snowden is learning Russian, travelling and may soon
get a job.
Earlier
this week his father Lon Snowden arrived in Moscow and reportedly had
an "emotional" meeting with his son.
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