MOSCOW, July 17: President Vladimir Putin on Wednesday sought to ease tensions with the United States over the stay of US intelligence leaker Edward Snowden in Russia, as a lawyer said the fugitive may request Russian citizenship.

Putin said Moscow’s relations with Washington outweighed the “squabbles” over Snowden, who applied for asylum on Tuesday after spending more than three weeks stranded in the transit zone of a Moscow airport.

But Putin also defended Moscow's right to an “independent” foreign policy after the United States renewed calls for the extradition of Snowden, who is seeking to evade espionage charges for leaking details of a vast US surveillance programme.

“Relations between states are much more important than squabbles surrounding the work of security services,” Putin said after overseeing military exercises in the far-flung eastern Siberian region of Chita.

Snowden, a former National Security Agency contractor, has been marooned at Moscow's Sheremetyevo airport since June 23 after revealing that Washington has been seizing huge amounts of Internet and telephone data around the world.

He officially applied for asylum Tuesday, and “does not rule out the possibility of asking for Russian citizenship,” said Anatoly Kucherena, a lawyer and pro-Kremlin public figure who helped Snowden file his request for temporary refuge.

Kucherena said that the request takes up to three months to process, but the migration service issues a notice within a week that the application has been accepted for examination, a document that could be used to exit the airport transit zone.

“He told me: 'I am not going to go anywhere',” Kucherena said after meeting Snowden this week.

Kucherena added he would be happy to show Snowden the sights of Moscow, including Red Square, Lenin's Mausoleum and the Tretyakov Gallery.

The Kremlin had said that Snowden's asylum request is “not a presidential issue” but Putin on Wednesday implied that Moscow would not be pressured by Washington.

“Russia has an independent foreign policy and we will follow it,” Putin said in televised remarks.

“We cannot and will not behave like other countries,” he said, in reference to an incident earlier this month when several European countries closed their airspace to Bolivian President Evo Morales's plane amid speculation that Snowden was on board.Moscow had said that extradition of Snowden is impossible due to lack of a relevant bilateral agreement with Washington, while Russia's parliament speaker said he should be given safe haven because he could face the death penalty at home.

The latest strains in ties between Moscow and Washington come as Putin is set to host US President Barack Obama for a hugely sensitive bilateral summit in Moscow followed by the G20 summit in Saint Petersburg in early September.

The White House voiced strong opposition to Snowden's request for asylum in Russia and has criticised Moscow for providing the 30-year-old with a “propaganda platform”.

“We believe there is ample legal justification for the return of Mr Snowden to the United States, where he has been charged with serious felonies,” White House spokesman Jay Carney said Tuesday.

He added that the way for the US and Russia to “move forward” from the Snowden scandal was for Moscow to send him home.

Snowden had indicated previously that he eventually wishes to travel on to Latin America.—AFP

Opinion

Editorial

Addressing contempt
Updated 07 Jun, 2024

Addressing contempt

It is imperative that the culture normalising contempt be dismantled and the boundaries of acceptable criticism defined once again.
Averting disaster
07 Jun, 2024

Averting disaster

PAKISTAN stands on the precipice of yet another potential flood disaster. According to the National Disaster...
Overzealous state
07 Jun, 2024

Overzealous state

INSTEAD of addressing the core issues that fuel discontent amongst the citizenry, the state prefers to go after ...
Real powers
Updated 06 Jun, 2024

Real powers

PTI seems to be repeating one of the biggest mistakes it made during its last tenure, when it sought to sideline its rivals.
Airline safety
06 Jun, 2024

Airline safety

WHILE the European Union has yet to issue a formal statement in this regard, it seems that Pakistan has remained...
Violent crime wave
06 Jun, 2024

Violent crime wave

THE violent crime wave that has been afflicting Karachi for the past few years shows no sign of abating, as lives...