Green Party leader Natalie Bennett has called on the EU’s diplomatic
leader to act to find US whistleblower Edward Snowden a place of safe
asylum.
Mr Snowden is currently believed to be in the transit area in a
Moscow airport, and a plane carrying the Bolivia’s president home from
Russia was refused permission to fly over several European states on the
suspicion that Mr Snowden might be on board, causing a serious
diplomatic incident.
Ms Bennett said Catherine Ashton, the High Representative of the
Union for Foreign Affairs and Security should be taking a lead in view
of the fact that Mr Snowden had clearly acted as a whistleblower,
exposing in the PRISM and Tempora programmes what the EU Justice
Commissioner has identified as breaches of what should be “mutual trust
and good practices in relations between friends and allies”. (1)
Ms Bennett said: “The UK, and many other European states, have
whistleblower legislation that explicitly protect individuals who speak
out about wrongdoing, and it is clear that Mr Snowden were he a national
of those states would be eligible for that protection. Additionally,
European states owe him a debt for exposing the action that the US was
taking against them.
“The United States should be treating Mr Snowden in this manner, but
given this seems unlikely, the European Union, and individual EU states,
as beneficiaries of his revelations, have a responsibility to act in
ensuring his security.”
The French, German and Finnish Green Parties have each respectively called on their countries to offer asylum to Mr Snowden.
Ms Bennett added: “The normal requirement for someone being in the
country in which they are requesting asylum should clearly be waived in
this case. Mr Snowden should be given a chance to peacefully and safely
reveal further information, and to rebuild his life in a safe haven,
whether in Europe or outside it.”
1.
http://europa.eu/rapid/press-release_SPEECH-13-607_en.htm