Nicaraguan President Daniel Ortega (left) listens to Venezuelan
President Victor Maduro,
both have offered asylum to Edward Snowden.
(photo: Reuters)
Venezuela and Nicaragua Offer Asylum to Edward Snowden
By Jonathan Watts, Guardian UK
06 July 13
President Maduro offers to protect NSA whistleblower
'from persecution by the empire' and rejects US extradition request.
Venezuela and Nicaragua have offered asylum to Edward Snowden, the US whistleblower who is believed to have spent
the past two weeks at a Moscow airport evading US attempts to extradite him.
The Venezuelan president, Nicolas Maduro, and his
Nicaraguan counterpart, Daneil Ortega, made the asylum offers on Friday,
shortly after they and other Latin American leaders met to denounce the
diversion of a plane carrying the Bolivian president, Evo Morales, due to
suspicions that Snowden might have been on board.
The invitations came as Snowden sent out new requests
for asylum to six countries, in addition to the 20 he has already contacted,
according to WikiLeaks, which claims to be in regular contact with the former
National Security Agency contractor.
Most of the countries have refused or given technical
reasons why an application is not valid, but several Latin American leaders
have rallied together with expressions of solidarity and welcome.
"As head of state of the Bolivarian republic of
Venezuela, I have decided to offer humanitarian asylum to the young Snowden ...
to protect this young man from persecution by the empire," said Maduro
who, along with his predecessor Hugo Chávez, often refers to the US as
"the empire".
The previous day, Maduro told the Telesur TV channel
that Venezuela had received an extradition request from the US, which he had
already rejected.
A copy of the
request, seen by the
Guardian, notes that Snowden "unlawfully released classified information
and documents to international media outlets" and names the Guardian and
the Washington Post. Dated 3 July and sent in English and Spanish, it says:
"The United States seeks Snowden's provisional arrest should Snowden
seek to travel to or transit through Venezuela. Snowden is a flight risk
because of the substantial charges he is facing and his current and active
attempts to remain a fugitive."
It adds that he is charged with unauthorised
disclosure of national defence information, unauthorised disclosure of
classified communication intelligence and theft of government property. Each of
these three charges carries a maximum penalty of 10 years imprisonment and a
fine of $250,000.
Describing Snowden as "a fugitive who is
currently in Russia", it urges Venezuela to keep him in custody if
arrested and to seize all items in his possession for later delivery to the US.
It provides a photograph and two alternative passport numbers - one revoked,
and one reported lost or stolen.
Maduro said he did not accept the grounds for the
charges.
"He has told the truth, in the spirit of
rebellion, about the US spying on the whole world," Maduro said in his
latest speech. "Who is the guilty one? A young man ... who denounces war
plans, or the US government which launches bombs and arms the terrorist Syrian
opposition against the people and legitimate president, Bashar al-Assad?"
The Bolivian government, which has said it would
listen sympathetically to an aslyum request from Snowden, said it too had turned
down a pre-emptive US extradition request.
Ortega said Nicaragua had received an asylum request
from Snowden and the president gave a guarded acceptance.
"We are an open country, respectful of the right
of asylum, and it's clear that if circumstances permit, we would gladly receive
Snowden and give him asylum in Nicaragua," Ortega told a gathering in
Managua.
So far, the countries that have been most vocal in
offering support are close allies of Venezuela. Ecuador has also expressed
support for Snowden, though the government there has yet to decide whether it
would grant aslyum. It is already providing refuge for the WikiLeaks founder
Julian Assange, who has been in the Ecuadorean embassy in London for about a
year.
Many in Latin America were furious when the Bolivian
president's flight from Russia was denied airspace by European countries,
forcing it to land in Vienna, where Morales had to spend more than half a day
waiting to get clearance to continue his journey.
Morales said the Spanish ambassador to Austria arrived
at the airport with two embassy personnel and asked to search the plane. He
said he refused.
The Spanish foreign minister, José Manuel
García-Margallo, acknowledged on Friday that the decision to block Morales
plane was based on a tip
that Snowden was on board.
"They told us that the information was clear,
that he was inside," he told Spanish TV, without clarifying who the tip
was from.
It is assumed the US was behind the diversion, though
US officials have said only that they were in contact with the countries on the
plane's route.
France has apologised to Bolivia.
Morales said when he finally arrived in La Paz:
"It is an open provocation to the continent, not only to the president;
they use the agent of North American imperialism to scare us and intimidate
us."
At a hastily called meeting of the Unasur regional bloc,
many governments condemned the action against Morales plane.
"We are not colonies any more," Uruguay's
president, José Mujica, said. "We deserve respect, and when on
e of our
governments is insulted we feel the insult throughout Latin America."
The Argentinean president, Cristina Fernandez de
Kirchner, was also present, along with a senior representative of President
Dilma Rousseff of Brazil.
Regional support may make it easier for the country
offering asylum to resist US pressure for extradition. But whether Snowden can
make it to South America remains uncertain, as are his current circumstances.
He has not been seen or heard in public since he flew to Russia from Hong Kong.
WikiLeaks says it is in touch with him and that he has widened his search for aslyum
by adding six new countries.
In a tweet, the group said it would not reveal the
names of the nations "due to attempted US interference".
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