Ecuador's minister of foreign affairs comments on asylum request at a press conference Ecuador is considering U.S. National Security Agency leaker Edward Snowden’s asylum request and has been maintaining diplomatic contact with Russia, said Ricardo PatiA+-o Aroca, Ecuador’s Minister of Foreign Affairs, Trade and Integration, on Monday.“Ecuador is considering Mr. Snowden’s asylum request,” said PatiA+-o during a press conference in Hanoi during a visit to Vietnam’s foreign minister. The event was live-streamed on the Internet in Spanish and an instant English translation was provided by the BBC.“All of us know he has arrived in the Russian Federation,” PatiA+-o said. The Russian government must decide how to handle Snowden in accordance with the country’s laws, PatiA+-o said. However, when asked directly, PatiA+-o said he did not know where the leaker was. “Specific information as to his whereabouts … we can not share that at this moment. We don’t have it and we can’t share it,” PatiA+-o said.Snowden requested the Ecuadorian government to grant him asylum because the U.S. has announced a criminal investigation against him, he wrote in his asylum request, said PatiA+-o. Because he has been accused of being a traitor, life in prison is among the possible sentences, Snowden wrote, according to PatiA+-o. In his request, Snowden also mentioned that Ecuador granted asylum to Wikileaks founder Julian Assange, who is currently staying in the Ecuadorian embassy in London, PatiA+-o said. Snowden compared his situation to Bradley Manning’s, who leaked U.S. diplomatic cables to Wikileaks and who, Snowden said, was treated inhumanely during his time in a U.S. prison, according to PatiA+-o.Snowden also said he believes he will not receive a fair trial in the U.S. and thus requested asylum, according to PatiA+-o. Earlier on Monday, Snowden was reportedly on route to Ecuador from Moscow via Havana. However, he wasn’t in the plane that he was thought to be in, according to an Associated Press reporterPatiA+-o declined to discuss how Snowden would reach Ecuador if his asylum request is granted.PatiA+-o questioned whether what Snowden did was treason. “We have to ask who has betrayed whom,” he said. A global espionage plot like Prism — the U.S. government’s surveillance program, whose details were leaked by Snowden — does not only affect U.S. citizens but would violate the rights of every citizen in the world, PatiA+-o said. Revealing such a monitoring program might not be treason against the world’s citizens but is more likely to be treason against a group of powerful leaders, he suggested.The current NSA leaks would have been helpful at the time of the Iraqi invasion that was “based on completely false information,” PatiA+-o said. “Wouldn’t it have been convenient to have known that before?” he asked, adding that knowing the truth up front could have prevented the deaths of hundreds of thousands, and could have avoided the sorrow of a nation.Reporters’ questions at the press conference suggested that sheltering people like Assange and Snowden could be harmful for the Ecuadorian-U.S. relationship. “Of course we are aware of the consequences of our decisions,” PatiA+-o said, when asked what effect the possible asylum for Snowden would have on Ecuador’s relationship the U.S. However, the U.S. and Ecuador are both sovereign countries that make sovereign decisions, he said.Moreover, Ecuador has requested the extradition of Ecuadorian citizens who fled to the U.S. on several occasions, PatiA+-o said. In those cases the U.S. exercised its sovereignty and decided not to extradite those people, owners of banks, who have harmed millions of Ecuadorians, he said. Ecuador places human rights above any other principle, PatiA+-o said, adding that is one of the main reasons Snowden’s asylum request is being considered. PatiA+-o also quoted several articles from the Ecuadorian constitution, one of which states that spying on citizens is illegal.He also referred to the protection of human rights in the U.N.’s Universal Declaration of Human Rights, adding that the fourth and fifth amendment in the U.S. Constitution also address related issues. Related content news Google Chrome zero-day jumps onto CISA's known vulnerability list A serious security flaw in Google Chrome, which was discovered under active exploitation in the wild, is a new addition to the Cybersecurity and Infrastructure Agency’s Known Exploited vulnerabilities catalog. 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