This Article is From Jul 02, 2013

US says Edward Snowden has right to 'fair trial' in America

US says Edward Snowden has right to 'fair trial' in America
Washington: The United States said Monday intelligence leaker Edward Snowden was still a US citizen and had the right to a "fair" trial if he returned to his native country.

State Department spokesman Patrick Ventrell rejected comments by WikiLeaks founder Julian Assange, who has described Snowden as being legally "marooned" in Moscow after Washington cancelled the leaker's US passport.

"That's not true," said Ventrell, referring to Assange's remarks.

He told reporters the US government could issue Snowden a "one entry travel document" to the United States as he is "accused of serious felony crimes."

"He's still a US citizen. He still enjoys the rights of his US citizenship, which include the right to a free and fair trial for the crimes he's been accused of."

Russian President Vladimir Putin said earlier Snowden was welcome to stay in his country as long as the former National Security Agency contractor stopped leaking US intelligence reports.

Snowden had stopped in Moscow from Hong Kong on June 23 on his way to Latin America, possibly Ecuador, in an attempt to avoid extradition to the United Sates on espionage charges.

The State Department spokesman declined to predict how the United States would respond if Snowden was given asylum in Russia.

"Again, we're not at that point right now. We're going to continue to make our case about what we think needs to happen, and we hope they do the right thing," Ventrell told reporters.

Ventrell also sidestepped questions about the latest revelations from Snowden that allege the United States routinely spied on its allies, including the European Union's office in Washington.

He declined to explicitly acknowledge the alleged electronic eavesdropping, refusing to either defend or apologize over the purported spying. Instead, he insisted the matter would be discussed with allies privately and not publicly.

Ventrell said "the US government will respond appropriately to our partners through diplomatic and intelligence channels."

But he echoed comments from President Barack Obama that seemed to suggest other governments engage in similar spying.

"While we're not going to comment publicly on the specifics of alleged intelligence activities, as a matter of policy, we've made clear that the US gathers foreign intelligence of the type gathered by all nations," he said.

Snowden, 30, who worked as an IT contractor for US intelligence services, publicly admitted to leaking documents exposing how the National Security Agency collects Americans' phone records and trawls through Internet traffic.

The latest leak alleges the United States spies on friendly embassies and missions, including implanting a device to monitor the EU office's encrypted fax machine in the US capital.

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