San Francisco Chronicle

Snowden pushes privacy, remotely, to N.Y. forum

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NEW YORK — Domestic digital spying on ordinary citizens is an internatio­nal threat that will only be slowed with measures like a proposed internatio­nal treaty declaring privacy a basic human right, Edward Snowden said Thursday in a video appearance at a Manhattan forum.

“This is not a problem exclusive to the United States. ... This is a global problem that affects all of us,” Snowden, the onetime National Security Agency systems analyst, said in his brief remarks from Moscow via video link. “What’s happening here happens in France, it happens in (Britain), it happens in every country, every place, to every person.”

The key question, Snowden added, is: “How do we assert what our rights are, traditiona­lly and digitally?”

Snowden gained notoriety in 2013 for leaking details of the once-secret U.S. surveillan­ce programs.

He fled to Russia, where he was granted asylum despite demands by the United States that he return to face espionage and other charges.

The global advocacy group Avaaz organized the gathering to promote what is called the “Snowden Treaty.”

Countries who signed would be required to curtail surveillan­ce of phone calls and online activity, and also agree to provide sanctuary for people who expose illegal domestic spying.

The forum was timed to coincide with the United Nations General Assembly. Organizers have said diplomats have shown interest in a draft of the treaty, but have declined to name what nations they represent.

The NSA’s collection of American phone metadata has been deeply controvers­ial ever since Snowden disclosed it to journalist­s.

President Obama sought, and Congress passed, a law ending the collection and instead allowing the NSA to request the records of U.S. domestic phone customers as needed in terrorism investigat­ions.

A succession of decisions in federal courts in Washington and New York have at various times threatened the constituti­onality of the NSA’s surveillan­ce program, but have so far upheld the NSA’s amassing of records from phone companies.

A website promoting the proposed treaty calls the NSA surveillan­ce programs “a direct contravent­ion of internatio­nal human right law.”

 ?? Kena Betancur / AFP / Getty Images ?? Via video link from Moscow, Edward Snowden told forum participan­ts that improper surveillan­ce is “a global problem that affects all of us.”
Kena Betancur / AFP / Getty Images Via video link from Moscow, Edward Snowden told forum participan­ts that improper surveillan­ce is “a global problem that affects all of us.”

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