1.

   Photo of Edward
#Snowden<https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Snowden&src=hash>leaving
Moscow airport today with
   #WikiLeaks <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23WikiLeaks&src=hash>' Sarah
   Harrison | Rossiya 24 pic.twitter.com/5KTq0E2t1m <http://t.co/5KTq0E2t1m>
   #Assange <https://twitter.com/search?q=%23Assange&src=hash>
   2.
   3. <https://twitter.com/wikileaks>*WikiLeaks*
@wikileaks<https://twitter.com/wikileaks>

   Edward Snowden was granted temporary asylum in Russia for a year and has
   now left Moscow airport under the care of WikiLeaks' Sarah Harrison



   Statement on Snowden’s Successful Russian Asylum Bid1 August 2013, 16:00
   UTC

   Today, Thursday 1st August at 15:50 MSK, Edward Snowden was granted
   temporary asylum in Russia. He left Sheremetyevo airport in Moscow with
   WikiLeaks staffer and legal advisor Sarah Harrison who has accompanied him
   during his 39 day stay in the transit zone and continues to do so. Ms
   Harrison has remained with Mr Snowden at all times to protect his safety
   and security, including during his exit from Hong Kong. They departed from
   the airport together in a taxi and are headed to a secure, confidential
   place.

   On 16th July Mr Snowden made a request for temporary asylum to Russia.
   Despite the ongoing pressure from the United States, which has been trying
   to interfere with this sovereign process in violation of the UN Protocol on
   the Rights of Refugees, Russia has done the right thing and granted Mr
   Snowden temporary asylum. The certificate of temporary asylum by the
   Russian Federation lasts for one year and affords Mr Snowden the right to
   live in and travel around Russia, where he can now plan his next steps in
   safety. On receiving his asylum certificate Mr Snowden said: "Over the past
   eight weeks we have seen the Obama administration show no respect for
   international or domestic law, but in the end the law is winning. I thank
   the Russian Federation for granting me asylum in accordance with its laws
   and international obligations."

   WikiLeaks, whilst being a publishing organisation, also fights for the
   rights and protections of journalistic sources, and so has taken a leading
   role in assisting Mr Snowden secure his safety. Mr Snowden, an American
   citizen, was forced to flee his country to enable him to safely reveal to
   the public the crimes of his government. President Barack Obama while
   elected on a platform promising to protect whistleblowers, has now
   prosecuted more national security whistleblowers than all other presidents
   in United States history combined. This bellicose response from the US
   administration makes it clear that Snowden could not receive a fair trial.
   Assange said "This is another victory in the fight against Obama’s war on
   whistleblowers. This battle has been won, but the war continues. The United
   States can no longer continue the surveillance of world citizens and its
   digital colonization of sovereign nations. The public will no longer stand
   for it. Whistleblowers will continue to appear until the government abides
   by its own laws and rhetoric."

   WikiLeaks commends Russia for accepting Snowden’s request and supporting
   him when many countries felt so compromised by US threats that they could
   not. Throughout Snowden’s stay in the airport it has been heartening to see
   citizens of the United States, of Russia and the world supporting Mr
   Snowden. WikiLeaks would also like to extend their gratitude to the airport
   staff who have assisted in making the extended stay of Mr Snowden and Ms
   Harrison as comfortable and secure as possible, despite the difficult
   conditions.

   Mr Snowden and Ms Harrison have been staying in the airport for almost
   six weeks, having landed on an Aeroflot flight from Hong Kong on the 23rd
   June. They had been booked on a connecting flight the following day. Mr
   Snowden intended to request asylum in Latin America. However, after Mr
   Snowden’s departure was made public, the United States government canceled
   his passport, which rendered onward travel impossible.

   From within the transit zone of the airport, Mr Snowden and Ms Harrison
   spent a number of weeks prior to his Russian application assessing the
   options available to him to ensure his future safety. Without a passport
   and no immediate offers of the necessary safe passage, travel was
   impossible. Over twenty asylum requests to various countries were made to
   try to secure Mr Snowden’s passage. Throughout this period the United
   States took irregular and disproportionate actions to block Mr Snowden’s
   right to seek asylum: downing the plane of the President of Bolivia and
   making direct political and economic threats againt nations Mr Snowden
   requested assistance from. This is in violation of United Nations General
   Assembly Resolution 2312 (1967), which states that:

   "the grant of asylum. . . is a peaceful and humanitarian act and... as
   such, it cannot be regarded as unfriendly by any other State."

   Despite these actions, Venezuela, Bolivia and Nicaragua stood strong and
   granted Mr Snowden asylum. At a meeting with lawyers and human rights
   organisations on the 12th July, Mr Snowden announced that he accepted
   Venezuela’s asylum offer, although ultimately US interference has, at least
   for the time being, prevented its practical acceptance.

   The Obama administration has demonstrated in its treatment of Bradley
   Manning, Thomas Drake, James Risen, James Rosen and others that the United
   States is no longer a safe place for whistleblowers and national security
   journalists. WikiLeaks urges that the US government amends its ways,
   reverse this trend and re-establish its moral authority. We will continue
   to defend Mr Snowden and urge the United States government to respect its
   constitution and international law.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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