Khaleej Times

Reporters in NSA spying back in US

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new york — Two reporters central to revealing the massive US government surveillan­ce effort returned to the United States on Friday for the first time since the story broke and used the occasion to praise their exiled source: Edward Snowden.

Glenn Greenwald and Laura Poitras of The Guardian became a story of their own amid speculatio­n they could be arrested upon arriving at Kennedy Airport. They were instead confronted by only reporters and photograph­ers before fighting through traffic en route to a midtown Manhattan hotel to receive a George Polk Award for national security reporting.

In remarks before an audience of other journalist­s and editors, the pair credited the courage of Snowden, the former NSA contractor who leaked the informatio­n for their story.

“This award is really for Edward Snowden,” Poitras said.

Greenwald said, “I hope that as journalist­s we realize not only the importance of defending our own rights, but also those of our sources like Edward Snowden.”

The pair shared the award with The Guardian’s Ewen MacAskill and Barton Gellman, who has led The Washington Post’s reporting on National Security Agency surveillan­ce. Revelation­s about the spy programs were first published in the two newspapers in June.

At the airport, Greenwald said he and Poitras were not “100 percent sure” they could enter the U.S. without being arrested. He said lawyers had been seeking assurance from the Justice Department “and they purposeful­ly wouldn’t give them any informatio­n about whether we were the target of a grand jury or whether there was already an indictment that was under seal.”

Still, Greenwald said he “expected that they wouldn’t be that incredibly stupid and self-destructiv­e to try and do something that in the eyes of the world would be viewed as incredibly authoritar­ian.”

After the award ceremony, Greenwald told reporters that he still speaks regularly to Snowden, who was granted asylum in Russia for a year.

He said Snowden was aware Greenwald and Poitras were to be honored in New York and “was very supportive of that.” Republican US Rep. Peter King, who leads the House Homeland Security subcommitt­ee on counterter­rorism and intelligen­ce, called Greenwald “a disgrace to journalism and the country.”

“No American should give Glenn Greenwald an award for anything,” he said. Snowden has been charged with three offences in the US, including espionage.

The disclosure­s have led to proposed overhauls of some US surveillan­ce programmes, changes in the way the government spies on foreign allies, disclosure­s to defendants in some terrorism cases and demands from private companies to share details about government cooperatio­n with their customers and shareholde­rs. —

 ?? Reuters ?? (From left to right) Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill after receiving the George Polk Awards in New York . —
Reuters (From left to right) Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill after receiving the George Polk Awards in New York . —

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