WikiLeaks'
Sarah Harrison who helped Snowden reach Moscow fears returning to UK
Sarah
Harrison, the WikiLeaks journalist, who accompanied Edward Snowden
from Hong Kong to Russia and stayed with him until he was given
asylum, says the whistleblowing site lawyers advise her against going
home to Britain.
RT,
6
November, 2013
The
statement published by WikiLeaks on Wednesday explains how she helped
Snowden successfully get Russian temporary asylum, which he received
on August 1, despite “substantial pressure from the United
States.”
Harrison,
who is 32, says she remained with him in Russia until it had been
established that he “was
free from the interference of any government.”
“We
have won the battle for Snowden’s immediate future, but the broader
war continues,”
Harrison writes.
However,
she voices fears citing examples of other whistleblowers being
persecuted – such as Chelsea Manning, who has just begun serving a
35 year sentence for revealing embarrassing facts about US conduct
during the Iraqi war; and Jeremy Hammond, a whistleblower, who is in
prison for a decade in New York for allegedly providing
journalists with documents exposing corporate surveillance.
In
the UK, her own home, Julian Assange has been holed up in the
Ecuadorian embassy for over a year as the UK has refused to grant him
permission to leave the embassy.
More
recently, Guardian journalist Glen Greenwald’s partner David
Miranda was detained at London’s Heathrow airport for nine hours –
the maximum time permitted – under anti-terrorism laws as he was
suspected of transferring Snowden’s files to Greenwald.
Miranda
has taken the British government to court to argue that his nine hour
detention was unlawful. His lawyers are in the High Court arguing
that he was not involved in “terrorism”
and his right to freedom of expression was curtailed.
With
all these developments in hand, “our
lawyers have advised me that it is not safe to return home,”
Harrison concludes from her new home in Berlin.
Despite
concerns for whistleblowers’ destinies, Harrison says she was
heartened to see people joining her cause to further investigate NSA
spying and to offer Snowden asylum in Germany.
Her
fears were echoed by journalists around the world.
Nozomi
Hayase in Culture Unplugged dubbed both Harrison and Snowden as
heroes since they didn’t do what they did for personal gain but for
the public good and because of “their
commitment to what they believe is right.”
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