Los Angeles Times

Russia extends Snowden’s stay

- By Isabel Gorst Gorst is a special correspond­ent. Marianne Levine in the Washington bureau contribute­d to this report.

MOSCOW — Russia has extended Edward Snowden’s residency permit, allowing the fugitive former U.S. intelligen­ce contractor to remain in the country for three more years, his lawyer said Thursday.

Snowden, who is wanted in the United States for leaking informatio­n about National Security Agency surveillan­ce practices, was stranded in the transit lounge at a Moscow airport in June 2013 while trying to f lee to Latin America. Russia eventually granted him a one-year temporary asylum permit that expired on Aug. 1, 2014.

Snowden asked the Russian authoritie­s last month to allow him to stay and finally got an answer this week. “A decision about the applicatio­n has been taken,” Anatoly Kucherena, a Russian lawyer who advises Snowden, said Thursday.

“Accordingl­y, from Aug. 1, 2014, Edward Snowden has received a residency permit in Russia for three years,” he added. Under the terms of the permit, Snowden can move around Russia and visit other countries for up to three months, “depending how he plans his time,” Kucherena told reporters in Moscow.

The document carries a three-year extension option. However, Snowden had not been granted political asylum that would allow him to stay in Russia indefinite­ly.

Political asylum could only be granted by presidenti­al decree and was a “completely different procedure,” Kucherena said. Russia’s decision to give refuge to Snowden has strained relations with the United States.

Relations have been further strained by Russia’s annexation of Crimea from Ukraine and support for separatist­s in that country’s eastern region. The United States and the European Union have imposed sanctions on Russia, which retaliated Wednesday with a ban on certain agricultur­al and food products from the U.S., EU and allied countries.

Although the United States has sought Snowden’s extraditio­n, Kucherena said there were no legal grounds to return him. “He has not committed any crimes. There are no accusation­s against him in the Russian Federation,” the lawyer said.

A Justice Department spokesman called on Snowden to turn himself in.

“It remains our position that Mr. Snowden should return to the United States and face the charges filed against him,” said the spokesman, Peter Carr. “If he does, he will be accorded full due process and protection­s.”

Snowden’s whereabout­s in Russia have been kept secret, and he has rarely been seen in public over the last year. Kucherena said his client has a job in informatio­n technology and is protected by a private security organizati­on.

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