Putin says Snowden should stop harming "our American partners"
President Vladimir Putin made starkly clear on Monday that Edward Snowden was not welcome in Russia, and voiced solidarity with the United States
View ArticlePartners do not spy on each other -EU’s Reding
He might be holed up in a Moscow airport in Russia, but Edward Snowden is continuing to do serious damage to the international standing of the US. Here are five things you should know about the...
View ArticleSnowden seeks asylum in 20 states
Edward Snowden has submitted asylum requests to 19 more nations other than Ecuador; including Cuba, Brazil, India, China, Russia, Germany and France.
View ArticleSnowden affair diverts Bolivia president’s plane
Bolivia’s president’s plane was diverted on a flight from Russia and forced to land in Austria over suspicions that Edward Snowden might be on board.
View ArticleAssange calls on Europe to ‘welcome’ fugitive Snowden
WikiLeaks chief Julian Assange on Wednesday urged European nations not to bow to US pressure and accept fugitive intelligence leaker Edward Snowden into their countries.
View ArticleBolivia threatens to close US embassy
Latin American leaders have blasted the US for rerouting the Bolivian president’s plane under suspicion that Edward Snowden was aboard.
View ArticleSnowden makes 6 new asylum applications
WikiLeaks says the NSA leaker Edward Snowden has put in 6 new asylum applications.
View ArticleIceland parliament declines Snowden’s citizenship bid
A bid by Edward Snowden for Icelandic citizenship failed when the country’s parliament voted not to debate it.
View ArticleRussian ex-spy proposes marriage to Edward Snowden
Russian former spy Anna Chapman has offered to marry former contractor for the NSA Edward Snowden, who is stuck without documents in a Moscow airport.
View ArticleExcitement in Russia as ex-spy offers marriage to Snowden
Russian ex-spy Anna Chapman has proposed marriage to US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden, who is stuck without documents in a Moscow airport, in an increasingly bizarre turn of events that unleashed...
View ArticleNicaragua and Venezuela offer Snowden asylum ‘if circumstances permit’
Venezuelan President Nicolas Maduro has offered asylum to former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden in defiance of Washington.
View ArticleFrance ‘running PRISM-like program’
France carries out mass surveillance of phone calls and e-mails in a program similar to the American one revealed by U.S. leaker Edward Snowden, a French newspaper has claimed.
View ArticleFlurry of asylum offers for Snowden
Bolivia offered asylum on Saturday to former US spy agency contractor Edward Snowden, joining Venezuela and Nicaragua in defiance of Washington.
View ArticleNicaragua reveals Snowden’s letter requesting asylum
Nicaragua has revealed details from Edward Snowden’s request for asylum, in which Snowden says it is unlikely he will receive a fair trial in the US.
View ArticleVenezuela or Bolivia? Snowden’s options
NSA-Leaker Edward Snowden has applied for political asylum in at least 21 countries. Currently living in limbo in a Russian airport, his options for finding a new home were looking pretty dim until...
View ArticleCould Cuba be next for Snowden?
If Edward Snowden flees to Cuba, then he would not be the first fugitive to do so, as CNN’s Patrick Oppmann reports.
View ArticleTracking Snowden’s asylum options
NSA-Leaker Edward Snowden has applied for political asylum in at least 21 countries. Currently living in limbo in a Russian airport, his options for finding a new home were looking pretty dim until...
View ArticleSnowden weighs up asylum offers
Still a man without a country and stuck in a Moscow airport, U.S. intelligence leaker Edward Snowden has two, maybe three, options available to him as he seeks asylum, following a busy weekend of...
View ArticleCuba extends support to asylum-seeking Snowden
Edward Snowden has won support from Cuba for his bid to seek asylum in Latin America, as he embarked on his third week in limbo at a Moscow airport.
View ArticleSnowden: Tweets cause confusion over Venezuela’s asylum offer
Uncertainties over Edward Snowden has deepened when a Russian lawmaker tweeted that Snowden had accepted Venezuela’s asylum offer, then deleted it.
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