Iceland Proposes Citizenship for Snowden
By Jenna Gottlieb, Associated Press
05 July 13
icelandic lawmakers introduced a proposal in Parliament
on Thursday to grant immediate citizenship to National Security Agency leaker
Edward Snowden, who admits to revealing key details of U.S. surveillance
activities.
Ogmundur Jonasson, whose liberal Left-Green Party is
backing the proposal along with the Pirate Party and Brighter Future Party, put
the issue before the Judicial Affairs Committee, but the idea received minimal
support.
Snowden is believed to be stuck in a Moscow airport
transit area, seeking asylum from more than a dozen countries. At one point, he
told the Guardian newspaper that he was inclined to seek asylum in a country
that shared his values - and that "the nation that most encompasses this
is Iceland."
But to apply for asylum in Iceland, Snowden would have
to reach the island nation's soil.
Granting Snowden immediate citizenship would
circumvent that issue. The same tactic helped get eccentric chess master Bobby
Fischer to Iceland from Japan in 2005 to escape U.S. prosecution for breaking
sanctions imposed on the former Yugoslavia.
Jonasson argued to parliament on Thursday that Snowden
"is now being chased and has nowhere to go," according to Icelandic
media.
Leaks by Snowden, a former NSA systems analyst, have
revealed the NSA's sweeping data collection of U.S. phone records and some
Internet traffic, though U.S. intelligence officials have said the programs are
aimed at targeting foreigners and terrorist suspects mostly overseas.
The proposal to grant Snowden citizenship received
limited support when it was discussed Thursday - the last day before summer
recess. Six members of minority parties were in favor out of Parliament's 63 members.
Snowden has applied for asylum in Venezuela, Bolivia
and 18 other countries, according to WikiLeaks, a secret spilling website that
has been advising him. Like Iceland, many European countries on the list -
including Austria, Finland, Ireland, the Netherlands, Norway, Spain and
Switzerland - said he would have to make his request on their soil.
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