BREAKING: Pres. Putin Says Edward Snowden is in Transite Area of Moscow Airport
(USAToday) MOSCOW — U.S. spy leaker Edward Snowden is in the transit
area of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport, Russian President Vladimir Putin
said on Tuesday. Putin said that Russia would not hand him over to the
U.S., with whom it does not have an extradition agreement .
Putin,
who was speaking while on a visit to Finland, said that Russian
security agencies "didn't work and aren't working" with Snowden. He said
the Snowden has not crossed the border into Russia and is free to go
anywhere.
Putin expressed hope that the move would not affect U.S.-Russia relations.
Earlier, Russia's foreign minister said that demands to extradite Snowden to the U.S. were "ungrounded and unacceptable."
Sergey
Lavrov said that Snowden had not crossed the border into Russia and
that his country has had no involvement in the former National Security
Agency contractor's travel plans.
"I want to say straight away
that we have no connection either to Mr. Snowden or to his relationship
with American justice, or to his travels around the world. He chose his
route independently, and we found out about it ... through the media. He
did not cross the Russian border," Lavrov said in comments carried by
RIA Novosti.
"We consider as absolutely unfounded and
unacceptable the attempts we are seeing to accuse Russia of violating
U.S. law and almost of conspiracy, accompanied by threats against us.
There is no lawful basis for this kind of behavior from American
officials." he said.
Snowden flew to Russia on Sunday from Hong
Kong, but he has not been seen in public after reports indicated he
arrived safely in Moscow.
He failed to board a flight bound for
Cuba on Monday afternoon, where it is thought he would then seek onward
travel to Ecuador, and possible political asylum. The U.S. has revoked
Snowden's passport, and on Monday White House spokesman Jay Carney said
that it is the administration's assumption "that he is in Russia."
Rimsky
Yuen, Hong Kong's justice secretary, meanwhile on Tuesday detailed some
of the clarifications that the city had requested of the U.S. regarding
its extradition request for Snowden after Carney said there had been "a
deliberate choice by the government to release a fugitive." Hong Kong
said it did not receive a reply before Snowden's flight.
Yuen
said that Hong Kong immigration records, the documents the U.S. Justice
Department provided on Snowden's charges and U.S. correspondence showed
Snowden's middle name differently — variously James, Joseph and just the
initial J — and that the U.S. did not provide his passport number,
which might have helped clarify his identity.
Yuen also said that Hong Kong was seeking U.S. clarification as to whether the charges against Snowden were political.
The
extradition agreement between the two governments specifically excludes
fugitives "if the offense of which that person is accused or was
convicted is an offense of a political character," said Barry Sautman,
an associate professor at Hong Kong University of Science and
Technology. Earlier, Sautman told USA TODAY he has "no doubt that a
court would construe what Snowden did as political."
"All along
we acted fully in accordance with the law and any suggestion that we
deliberately let Mr Snowden go away or (did anything else) to obstruct
the normal operation is totally untrue," said Yuen.
Edward Snowden: The mystery deepens
Tuesday's
remarks from Russia and Hong Kong came after a Chinese state newspaper
praised Snowden for his decision to make public government surveillance
programs, adding fresh pressure to increasingly strained U.S.-China
relations.
In a commentary, the China's People's Daily, the
Chinese Communist party's official newspaper, lauded Snowden for
"tearing off Washington's sanctimonious mask."
The People's Daily
added: "Not only did the U.S. authorities not give us an explanation
and apology, it instead expressed dissatisfaction at the Hong Kong
Special Administrative Region for handling things in accordance with the
law." The commentary went on: "In a sense, the U.S. has gone from a
model of human rights to an eavesdropper on personal privacy, the
manipulator of the centralized power over the international internet,
and the mad invader of other countries' networks."
Separately,
Chinese Foreign Ministry spokeswoman Hua Chunying also denounced the
U.S. accusations as "groundless." She said, "It is unreasonable for the
U.S. to question Hong Kong's handling of affairs in accordance with law,
and the accusation against the Chinese central government is
groundless."
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