Bolivian President's plane forced to land over Suspicions that Snowden was aboard

Samstwitch

Senior Member
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WOW! There is no safe place for Whistleblowers today! The NWO is at the helm.

Bolivian president's plane diverted over Snowden suspicion

MOSCOW (Reuters) - Bolivia said President Evo Morales' plane was diverted on a flight from Russia and forced to land in Austria over suspicions that Edward Snowden might be on board, as several countries spurned the former U.S. spy agency contractor's asylum requests.

France and Portugal abruptly canceled air permits for Morales' plane, forcing the unscheduled stopover in Vienna.

There was no evidence that Snowden, wanted by Washington for espionage after divulging classified details of U.S. phone and Internet surveillance, had left the transit area of Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport.

An Austrian Foreign Ministry official said rumors that Snowden was on the plane were untrue.

The diversion of Morale's plane on Tuesday was another strange turn in the 30-year-old American's cat-and-mouse game with the United States. Bolivian Foreign Minister David Choquehuanca blamed it on "unfounded suspicions that Mr. Snowden was on the plane.

"We don't know who invented this lie," Choquehuanca said. "We want to express our displeasure because this has put the president's life at risk."

Bolivia is among more than a dozen countries where Snowden has sought asylum and Morales, who was attending an energy conference in Russia this week, has said he would consider granting the American refuge if requested.

Bolivian Defence Minister Ruben Saavedra said the U.S. State Department may have been behind the decisions to not allow Morales' plane to land in Portugal or fly over French air space.

"We have the suspicion that they (the two European governments) were used by a foreign power, in this case the United States, as a way of intimidating the Bolivian state and President Evo Morales," he said.

Another Bolivian official said later that Italy had also refused permission.

Snowden's options seem only to have narrowed since he arrived in Moscow from Hong Kong on June 23 with no valid travel documents, after the United States revoked his passport.

U.S. President Barack Obama has warned that an offer of asylum from a country would carry serious costs.

A prolonged stay in Russia seemed out of the question. A spokesman for President Vladimir Putin said Snowden had withdrawn his request for asylum after the Russian leader said he should stop "harming our American partners."

Moscow is unwilling to send Snowden to the United States, a move that could make it look weak, and it has no extradition treaty with Washington. But it also does not want to damage ties with the United States over a man for whom Putin, a former KGB spy, has little sympathy.

Five countries have rejected granting Snowden asylum, seven have said they would consider a request if made on their soil, and eight said they had either not made a decision or not received a request.

Among the few countries that could still take him is Venezuela, part of an alliance of leftist governments in Latin America, which said it was time to stop berating a man who has "done something very important for humanity".

"He deserves the world's protection," President Nicolas Maduro told Reuters during a visit to Moscow for a meeting of gas exporting countries.

"He has a right to protection because the United States in its actions is persecuting him ... Why are they persecuting him? What has he done? Did he launch a missile and kill someone? Did he rig a bomb and kill someone? No. He is preventing war."

Maduro said he would consider an asylum application. He later had talks with Putin but neither leader said whether they had discussed Snowden. However, Russian news agencies Interfax and RIA reported on Tuesday night that the Venezuelan president was leaving Moscow for Belarus without Snowden.

'MISTAKE'

The American's request for safety in Ecuador, which has sheltered the founder of anti-secrecy group WikiLeaks Julian Assange in its London embassy, no longer looks promising.

Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa has said he could not consider an asylum request from Snowden unless he was on their territory.

Correa has said giving Snowden a temporary travel pass to fly to Moscow from Hong Kong was "a mistake on our part".

Norway said he was unlikely to get asylum there, Brazil ruled out even answering his request and Poland has said it would not give a "positive recommendation" to any application.

Finland, Spain, Ireland and Austria said he had to be in their countries to make a request, while India said "we see no reason" to accept his petition. France said it had not received a request and China's Foreign Ministry spokeswoman said she had no information on Snowden's asylum request.

At a meeting with Russian Foreign Minister Sergei Lavrov in Brunei, U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry said he had raised Snowden "from our point of view" despite the affair not being in their domain.

"Russia has never extradited anyone, is not extraditing anyone and will not extradite anyone," Putin's spokesman, Dmitry Peskov, told reporters.

Officials in Russia said, however, say that an embassy car would be considered foreign territory if another country picked him up and offered him asylum.
 

Samstwitch

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Bolivian President.jpg

'Not Your Colony': Bolivia Threatens Shutdown of US Embassy

South American leaders flank the Bolivian President as he rails against US air piracy in manhunt for Snowden

July 5, 2013 - Bolivian President Evo Morales threatened Thursday to shut down the U.S. embassy in his country after a forced re-routing and downing of his plane earlier this week on suspicion that NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden was on board.

Morales was flanked by the heads of state of Venezuela, Ecuador, Argentina, and Uruguay as he announced the possible embassy closure at a special meeting in Cochabamba, Bolivia. He declared:

Being united will defeat American imperialism. We met with the leaders of my party and they asked us for several measures and if necessary, we will close the embassy of the United States. We do not need the embassy of the United States.
The South American government leaders blasted the 'kidnapping' of the Bolivian president as an act of brute power, revealing that the U.S. and European governments still view themselves as the colonial rulers of Latin America. Uruguay's president Jose Mujica declared:

We are not colonies any more. We deserve respect, and when one of our governments is insulted we feel the insult throughout Latin America.
Ecuadorean President Rafael Correa pointed out:

If this had happened to the president of the United States, it probably would have been grounds for war.
Washington is widely believed to have applied the political pressure to France, Portugal, Italy and Spain that led to the forced downing of the Bolivian president's flight. European countries acted on a tip that Snowden was on board the flight, the media revealed Thursday, but they refused to admit where the information came from.

Snowden was not found on the flight.

Morales said Tuesday that he would grant political asylum to Snowden if asked. Critics have slammed the U.S. for the global manhunt for Snowden, declaring it retaliatory against whistleblowing and bullying of countries that do not participate in the crackdown. Guardian writer John Pilger had harsh words for the incident:

The forcing down of Bolivian President Evo Morales's plane – denied airspace by France, Spain and Portugal, followed by his 14-hour confinement while Austrian officials demanded to "inspect" his aircraft for the "fugitive" Edward Snowden – was an act of air piracy and state terrorism. It was a metaphor for the gangsterism that now rules the world and the cowardice and hypocrisy of bystanders who dare not speak its name.
The U.S. remains silent about the 'kidnapping' incident
 

TimeTravel_00

Active Member
Messages
591
Sam, capitalism is the guise, the federal reserve is the tool. Control is the game, freedom is the illusion. We saw how quickly the entire EU did exactly as it was ordered too. Did you know that the US gives over $1 billion to the Egyptian military? They have a very similar special forces program to ours. It would appear that the AFE was in control all along.
 

Samstwitch

Senior Member
Messages
5,111
Sam, capitalism is the guise, the federal reserve is the tool. Control is the game, freedom is the illusion. We saw how quickly the entire EU did exactly as it was ordered too. Did you know that the US gives over $1 billion to the Egyptian military? They have a very similar special forces program to ours. It would appear that the AFE was in control all along.


Yes, I'm aware of these things and hope to bring it to the attention of others. I highly recommend reading the following book: Amazon.com: The Elite Serial Killers of Lincoln, JFK, RFK & MLK: Robert Gaylon Ross Sr.
 

TimeWizardCosmo

Senior Member
Zenith
Messages
2,936
Sam, capitalism is the guise, the federal reserve is the tool. Control is the game, freedom is the illusion. We saw how quickly the entire EU did exactly as it was ordered too. Did you know that the US gives over $1 billion to the Egyptian military? They have a very similar special forces program to ours. It would appear that the AFE was in control all along.


Yes, I'm aware of these things and hope to bring it to the attention of others.

I think the people who frequent this site aren't the people who need to be told :p
 

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