Snowden pushes UN on privacy

Former US NSA contractor Edward Snowden is shown on a livestream from Moscow, during the Right Livelihood Award ceremony at the second chamber hall at the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm. Photo: Pontus Lundahl

Former US NSA contractor Edward Snowden is shown on a livestream from Moscow, during the Right Livelihood Award ceremony at the second chamber hall at the Swedish Parliament in Stockholm. Photo: Pontus Lundahl

Published Dec 2, 2014

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Helsinki - Edward Snowden, co-winner of the Right Livelihood Award, has called on the United Nations to propose new measures to protect individual privacy and human rights.

The prize, also known as the “alternative Nobel”, recognises “the work of so many people... not just over recent years” but over decades, the former NSA systems analyst told the award ceremony on Monday in Swedish Parliament by video link.

“I hope despite all we have accomplished in the last year, we all recognise that this is only the beginning,” Snowden said, adding that he could only accept the award collectively.

Snowden, who remains in Russia after leaking NSA documents to journalists in 2013, said he has no regrets about his actions.

He said journalists, publishers and activists were among those who had put “so much on the line” and many couldn't go home because they feared arrest, including himself.

“These are things that are unlikely to change soon. But they're worth it,” he said. “All the prices we paid, all the sacrifices we made, I believe we'd do it again.”

“There is so much more to do... and together we will achieve it,” Snowden said, receiving a standing ovation.

Snowden split the honorary portion of the award with Alan Rusbridger, editor of the Guardian, which has published a series of articles on government surveillance based on documents leaked by Snowden.

The 1.5 million kronor ($210 000) cash portion of the award was shared by Pakistani human rights activist Asma Jahangir, Basil Fernando of the Asian Human Rights Commission and US environmentalist Bill McKibben.

The Right Livelihood Award foundation typically honours grass-roots activists.

Sapa-AP

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