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A television screenshot shows Edward Snowden's new Russian travel document.
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Edward Snowden left a Moscow airport on Thursday after being
granted temporary asylum in Russia. His attorney is declining to state
his whereabouts, but the whistleblower has permission to stay for a
year.
Edward Snowden officially entered into Russia on Thursday, with the
prospect of staying in the country as a free man for up to a year. The
whistleblower left Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport on Thursday afternoon
after spending more than a month in the transit area. After the United
States invalidated his passport, he had to wait until he had obtained
temporary travel documents from the Russian government before he could
leave the airport.
In a brief interview, Snowden's lawyer Anatoly Kucherena told the Wall Street Journal
his client had been given permission to stay in Russia for one year. "I
already escorted him out of the airport into a taxi," the lawyer told
the newspaper, although he declined to state his whereabouts.
Snowden gained attention around the world with his leak
of documents exposing secret spying programs operated by the United
States and other countries that monitor global Internet and telephone
communications. He first fled to Hong Kong and later to Russia. The US
government wants to try him for the betrayal of secrets and has
repeatedly demanded that he be extradited.
Snowden submitted his official request for temporary asylum in Russia
on July 16 in the transit area of Sheremetyevo airport to an employee
of Russia's Federal Migration Service.
Snowden's Dad: 'I Would Stay in Russia'
On Wednesday, his father Lon Snowden recommended that his son stay in
Russia. "I feel Russia has the strength and resolve and convictions to
protect my son," he told Russian TV station Rossiya 24. "If it were me, I
would stay in Russia and that's what I hope my son will do," he said,
adding that he hopes to soon have the chance to visit him. Addressing
his son, Lon Snowden said, "your family is well and we love you."
Snowden also expressed concerns about how his son might be handled by
the justice system if he returned to the US. "The fact is, no
assurances have been made that he will be given a fair trial," he told
the station.
Lon Snowden also warned his son might face a fate similar to that of
Bradley Manning, who was convicted by a military court this week of
violating the Espionage Act by providing hundreds of thousands of
classified documents to WikiLeaks. Manning "was stripped of his clothes,
kept for 23 hours a day in solitary confinement, his glasses were
removed," he said. "That was unacceptable. I just don't have a high
level of trust in our justice system, not only because of what has
happened to my son." Source: Der Spiegel
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