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The television screen shows US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden during a news bulletin at a cafe at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport. (Photo: Reuters/Sergei Karpukhin)
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July 2, 2013. RT News - US whistleblower Edward Snowden asked for asylum in Russia, but
later withdrew the request after President Putin urged him to cease
"anti-American activity," according to the President's spokesperson.
“Snowden did ask
to stay in Russia. However, when he found out Russia’s position on the matter
and the associated conditions he decided not to stay in Russia,” said
Kremlin spokesperson Dmitry Peskov. Snowden is still held up in a Moscow airport
and has issued asylum bids to 15 countries, the spokesman added.
Peskov told press that Russia does not relinquish political
asylum seekers to countries with the death penalty.
“Snowden, by
sincere conviction or for some other reason, considers himself to be a human
rights activist, a fighter for the ideals of democracy and human freedom.
Russian human rights activists and organizations, as well as their colleagues
abroad acknowledge this. For this reason, extraditing Snowden to a country like
the US where capital punishment is enforced is impossible,” Peskov explained
to press.
Furthermore, Peskov stressed that
Snowden is currently in the transit zone area of Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport
and had never crossed the Russian border. He added that the Russian authorities
are not engaged in active dialogue with the former CIA employee and “have never collaborated with Snowden.”
Russian President Vladimir Putin stated on Monday that Snowden could stay in the
Russian Federation on the condition that he ceased all anti-American activity.
Furthermore, Putin affirmed that Russia has no intention of extraditing Snowden
as “Russia has never extradited anyone.”
However, Snowden is no longer in a position to harm the US, as
all the information he has, has already been leaked to journalists and so it is
up to them when and if further revelations that are damaging to the US are
released, James Corbett, an independent journalist and editor of the Corbett
Report, told RT.
As such, Putin’s comments - that he stops leaking information
- are on face value meaningless.
“It’s a
question of what we make of the offer itself and really I think there’s not much
more to it than political blather that’s aimed to shore up the Moscow Washington
relationship, rather than anything to do with Snowden and what he’s talking
about,” said Corbett.
The former CIA employee,
responsible for releasing troves of NSA classified data to the press, is stuck
in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo for the time being. The whistleblower has applied for
asylum in 21 countries, according to the organization
WikiLeaks, who claims to be helping Snowden get political asylum.
Source: RT News
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