​Edward Snowden ‘would love to return’ to Geneva, makes public appeal

6 Mar, 2015 19:06 / Updated 10 years ago

US whistleblower Edward Snowden has publically pleaded with Switzerland to grant him asylum. Calling it a “great political option,” he said that he dreamed of going to Geneva, where he used to work undercover for the CIA.

"I would love to return to Switzerland, some of my favorite memories are from Geneva. It's a wonderful place," Snowden told the International Film Festival and Forum on Human Rights on Thursday night, when he was asked about seeking asylum, Reuters reported.

Snowden not going home untill 'US government stops politicizing his case' http://t.co/mpnRA3vJ5Gpic.twitter.com/N1PDfMpGPE

— RT (@RT_com) March 5, 2015

“I do think Switzerland would be a sort of great political option because it has a history of neutrality,” he added, speaking from Moscow by video link to a Geneva audience, which had just watched "Citizenfour", an Oscar-winning documentary based on the story of the former US spy agency contractor on the run.

Snowden reminded the Swiss that he had applied for asylum to 21 countries, "the majority in central and Western Europe." The United States canceled his passport and he had to stay in limbo at a Russian airport, where he was stopped from going to Ecuador. "Unfortunately no country said yes," he said, blaming the Obama administration’s "political interference."

31-year-old Snowden worked at the US diplomatic mission in Geneva from March 2007 to February 2009, wire-tapping communications systems. At that time, under an online username “TheTrueHOOHA”, Snowden shared his views on life in Switzerland with fellow Americans, saying that it was “like living in a post card,” but also “nightmarishly expensive and horrifically classist,” as cited by The Local.

Current Swiss law requires an applicant to be in Switzerland to lodge an asylum request.

READ MORE: Snowden ready to go to US if he gets fair trial - whistleblower's lawyer

In his speech, Snowden also pointed out that a "fair trial" could be the only reason for him to return to his motherland. He said, “I am working very hard with my lawyers to try to get reliable guarantees of a fair trial. Unfortunately, the Department of Justice is unwilling to agree. The only thing they have said at this point is that they would not execute me, which is not the same as a fair trial.”

Snowden is wanted by the US on charges of espionage and theft of government property after leaking a vast trove of classified material to journalists. The whistleblower’s revelations lifted the lid of secrecy on a vast range of the National Security Agency’s global spying operations.

Snowden arrived in Moscow on the evening of June 24, 2013, on a flight from Hong Kong. He had intended to catch a connecting flight to Cuba. However, his passport was revoked by the US, leaving him stranded in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport.

READ MORE: Snowden granted 3-yr residence permit in Russia - lawyer

He was granted asylum for one year in Russia in August 2013. A year later, Snowden received a Russian residence permit, which is valid for three years. This period started on August 1, 2014.

Snowden has been the recipient of the German 'Whistleblower Prize,' the Sam Adams Award which was presented to him in Moscow, the German ‘positive’ Big Brother Award, the Ridenhour Truth-Telling Prize, and the Fritz Bauer Prize.

He also joined the board of directors of the Freedom of the Press Foundation, co-founded by Daniel Ellsberg, and was elected in absentia as rector of the University of Glasgow.

Snowden inspired not only Laura Poitras, director of the Oscar-winning CitizenFour documentary, but also another US director, veteran filmmaker Oliver Stone, to turn his story into fiction. Stone has purchased the rights to both “The Snowden Files,” a 2014 book about the NSA leaks written by Guardian journalist Luke Harding, and “Time of the Octopus,” a novel based loosely on the Snowden saga penned by the former contractor’s Russian lawyer, Anatoly Kucherena. Shooting is set to take place in Munich this year.