From Amnesty International:
The reports that Edward Snowden has been living in Russia with precarious "temporary leave to remain" rather than under any formal asylum protection is further evidence he must be allowed to travel to and seek asylum in the country of his choice, said Amnesty International today.
Russia's one-year permit for the whistleblower and former US intelligence analyst to stay in the country is now reported to have expired without confirmation that it will be extended.
"Edward Snowden is cornered in a legal limbo, without a passport or asylum protection from any government," said Sherif Elsayed-Ali, Deputy Director of Global Thematic Issues at Amnesty International.
States should fully consider any asylum application from Edward Snowden, taking into account the massive human rights violations that he exposed, and noting the US government's repressive actions against him.
(Score: 1) by AlHunt on Wednesday August 06 2014, @10:17PM
> It can't be that hard to run a ship in international waters where the US has no jurisdiction.
If Snowden finds himself on a ship in international waters, I'm thinking jurisdiction wouldn't be a real big concern for the US.