Today marks five years since the Guardian published Verizon’s FISA court order, the first story based on documents provided by NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden. At the time this story appeared, the whistleblower’s name was not known. It was three days and several enormous stories later that Snowden finally stepped out of the shadows, the source of the biggest public archive of top secret documents in history.
Category: Edward Snowden
1pm EST, 24 September 2015, NYC
Glenn Greenwald, Edward Snowden, Laura Poitras, and Greenwald’s partner David Miranda have together drafted a ‘Snowden Treaty,’ “a proposed treaty that would curtail mass surveillance and protect the rights of whistleblowers.”
At SnowdenTreaty.org, the drafters explain that the worldwide mass surveillance that Snowden exposed have made clear the need for international protections:
This breach of millions of people’s privacy is in direct contravention of international human right law. In particular, the right to privacy is enshrined it Article 12 of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights, and Article 17 of the International Convention on Civil and Political Rights.
Protecting the right to privacy is vital not just in itself but because it is essential requirement for exercise of freedom of opinion and expression, the most fundamental pillars of democracy.
They further lay out three demands:
- We demand for privacy on the internet.
- We demand that the government grant us the right to privacy in our homes.
- We demand that the government protect our personal privacy online.
The treaty will be announced at a press conference on 24 September 2015, at ThoughtWorks Office, 99 Madison Avenue, 2nd Floor, at 1pm EST. Supporters are tweeting about the proposal with #SnowdenTreaty and #PrivacyMatters. Noam Chomsky, Oliver Stone, and John Cusack have already signed on in support.
Courage will tweet the day’s events and continue to report on the treaty’s developments.
Update
Edward Snowden, Glenn Greenwald and David Miranda have discussed the Treaty in an appearance on Democracy Now. Video follows below and a full transcript is also available.
Davide Dormino’s public artwork Anything To Say? continues its journey around Europe this month to stand outside the UN Human Rights Council as it begins its 30th session.
Whistleblowers and Courage Advisory Board members Thomas Drake and Daniel Ellsberg discussed the recent passage of the USA Freedom Act (following the expiration of the Patriot Act’s Section 215), pointing out problems with the bill while praising Snowden for a “symbolic victory” and for generating the global debate that has led to legal and technological reforms, surveillance inquires and an increasing opposition to mass surveillance.
Drake said, “This is the first time since 9/11 that any publicly known legislation has changed. Mitch McConnell was unable as majority leader to push through what he wanted.” He added, “This vindicates Snowden, even if it’s only symbolic vindication.”
Snowden is “responsible for the Congress refusing to simply rubber stamp the program,” Ellsberg said, while noting that the Act is “in the right direction, but very minimal.”
Both whistleblowers will be in Berlin on Sunday 7 June for a Courage-sponsored discussion on the digital surveillance state, which also features Jesselyn Radack and Coleen Rowley, moderated by Courage’s Sarah Harrison.
The Courage Foundation is delighted that CITIZENFOUR has been awarded the Oscar for the Best Documentary Feature of 2014.
The film shows that after journalists left Edward Snowden in Hong Kong, awaiting the United States’ charges and extradition request, Snowden relied on WikiLeaks to secure him asylum. As Laura Poitras’ film depicts, Snowden is now safe, living comfortably with his girlfriend in Moscow, but the film demonstrates the dangerous gap in protections for whistleblowers. WikiLeaks’ rescue – and the need it demonstrated – was the inception of Courage, devoted to providing protections, defence and safety nets for whistleblowers in the highest-risk situations, when others can’t or won’t help.
Courage, which hosts Edward Snowden’s only official defence fund, is establishing international networks ready to provide future Snowdens with logistical and legal help, in addition to assisting journalistic sources at risk before the investigation stage. But we need your help. Fighting legal battles against the most powerful governments in the world is expensive, yet essential. Courage’s Acting Director Sarah Harrison said: “Governments are ramping up their efforts to persecute those who expose the truth, and we must do the same if we’re going to keep our truth-tellers safe. Donate to Courage to ensure we are there when we are needed most.”
Donate to Courage today to contribute to the frontline of defence for future Snowdens: /donate
Further information:
Update
Video of Laura Poitras accepting the Oscar for Best Documentary:
The ACLU has published Edward Snowden’s statement congratulating Laura Poitras for her award:
When Laura Poitras asked me if she could film our encounters, I was extremely reluctant. I’m grateful that I allowed her to persuade me. The result is a brave and brilliant film that deserves the honor and recognition it has received. My hope is that this award will encourage more people to see the film and be inspired by its message that ordinary citizens, working together, can change the world.
This weekend, an op-ed written by Edward Snowden’s father Lon appeared in the pages of Philadelphia magazine. Lon Snowden, a former chief warrant officer with the US Coast Guard, used the article to draw parallels between his son’s actions and those of the Media Eight, who brought COINTELPRO to the attention of the US public by breaking into an FBI field office in Pennsylvania in 1971.
Citizenfour, the new documentary from acclaimed filmmaker Laura Poitras, director of The Oath and My Country, My Country, has incredible access to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden, produced as it is by a central protagonist in his story. It is no small achievement to show the human cost of blowing the whistle as vividly as Poitras’ film does without obscuring the importance of the message. No viewer is likely to come away from Citizenfour unconvinced of the gravity of mass surveillance, or that systems of support for truthtellers are so sorely needed – and that, despite enormous risks, conscientious individuals will continue to come forward to inform the public.
The centerpiece of Citizenfour is a sequence that takes up half its running time, shot in the Hong Kong hotel room where Edward Snowden first met the journalists who would bring his revelations to world attention. In a small room at the Mira, Edward Snowden explains in calm and lucid terms why he decided to risk his life and liberty to expose international mass surveillance, unambiguously in the interests of the public. In a matter of days, he and the three journalists in the room – Laura Poitras, Glenn Greenwald and Ewen MacAskill – pull together the initial reports that dominated headlines in the summer of 2013: the Verizon court order that demonstrated the existence of domestic bulk collection, the NSA’s PRISM access to online service providers’ data, GCHQ’s extraordinarily broad TEMPORA data collection and, of course, finally the identity of the whistleblower himself.
In the lead-up to the sequence in Hong Kong, we see just how much our understanding of the NSA’s activities owes to whistleblowers. Poitras shows William Binney’s attempts to first build privacy protections into the ThinThread collection programme, and then to make its civil liberties infringements known. We also see arguments in the EFF’s long running anti-surveillance legal action, Jewel v NSA, launched back in 2008 as a consequence of AT&T whistleblower, Mark Klein’s disclosures. This sequence shows the limits of legal activism in the face of state secrets privilege and the other maneouvres the government can employ when facts are not in the public domain. By providing the documents that enable such actions to continue, Edward Snowden has in a very real sense built on the contributions of previous whistleblowers.
Just as Mark Klein’s disclosures made the initial stages of Jewel v NSA possible, the film indicates the range of consequences of Snowden’s revelations. The revelations have produced more real-world impact than could fit in any two hour documentary, but we see scenes from the EU and Brazilian investigations into mass surveillance. Bill Binney comes back into frame, this time to testify to the ongoing Bundestag investigation into surveillance. The film conveys the feeling that there’s going to be a lot more to come – and Courage’s official Edward Snowden support site will continue to track those developments here.
One of the most important messages of the film is left implicit: as viewers, we are made very aware of the risks Edward Snowden took. Poitras’ camera captures Snowden’s reaction to truly extraordinary circumstances. Even as we see his bravery in contemplating his own likely apprehension and imprisonment – he is surprisingly calm throughout – Edward Snowden is still visibly unnerved when he learns that his girlfriend Lindsay Mills has had to deal with a visit from the authorities. The Edward Snowden in Poitras’ film is a remarkable individual, but also very human one with very human fears about what might happen to him. When we see assistance begin to arrive – some days into his stay in Hong Kong, Edward Snowden is shown speaking to local lawyers over the telephone – we see how those efforts had to be improvised in the midst of international press attention and with US agents on their heels. The actions that actually saved Edward Snowden and brought him to safety of asylum in Russia happen off-screen, but a short shot of Julian Assange nods to this parallel narrative being planned simultaneously to the action Laura Poitras was able to film. Overall, the film serves as a striking reminder of the vital importance of reliable whistleblower protection and the risks involved in providing it.
Citizenfour concludes on two notes of optimism: first, we see that here is life after blowing the whistle and that Edward Snowden is leading an ordinary life in Russia with Lindsay Mills, free to continue to participate in the international debate he kick-started. We also see that others are coming forward. Greenwald is shown meeting Edward Snowden in another hotel room, this time in Moscow, telling him about a new source who was inspired by Snowden to blow the whistle.
Laura Poitras’ film shows us that that it is possible for truthtellers to escape prosecution under unjust laws and and an unconscionably long prison sentence. The US government tried to set an example of Chelsea Manning with an extremely long prison sentence as a deterrent; by protecting Snowden before he was discovered, those who helped him have set an example of their own to stand up for whistleblowers no matter the cost. But the film should also remind us of the need to ensure that systems and support networks are in place for future Snowdens to avoid prison. That’s spurred in part by Edward Snowden, and partly by what’s happened to his forerunners, like Bill Binney, or like Courage Advisory Board member Thomas Drake, another NSA truthteller. Drake worked for the NSA until 2006, when he blew the whistle on warrantless wiretapping. The US government charged him with espionage, threatening decades in prison, and ran him bankrupt fighting the case before dropping the major charges just before trial, leaving him out of work, out of money, and out of a reputation he spent his life building. Drake, like Snowden, could’ve used a well-resourced and well-prepared support system ready to defend him on every front. That’s what Courage is doing: both by crowdsourcing the legal defence for named truthtellers like Edward Snowden and by intervening as early as we can with a new fund for sources who find themselves under investigation and unable to go public, along with other plans as we grow to offer assistance and protection to truthtellers.
That Edward Snowden was protected even in such an extreme situation underscores how important it is for organisations like Courage to be prepared well earlier: to have lawyers and activists prepared to drop everything and protect a source before the government comes knocking on their door. The next Snowdens should have the kind of security they need waiting for them, so all they need to do is blow the whistle.
- Russell Brand, M.I.A., Tom Morello and More Involved in Effort
- Vivienne Westwood, Viggo Mortensen, Others Promote Courage Foundation’s Whistleblower Defense Efforts
An international coalition of more than fifty actors, musicians and intellectuals have announced their support for Edward Snowden, WikiLeaks, whistleblowers and publishers. Some are also encouraging donations to the Courage Foundation —which runs the official legal defense fund for Edward Snowden and other whistleblowers, as well as fights for whistleblower protections worldwide – with tweets and social media posts.
“The courage that Edward Snowden and other whistleblowers and truthtellers have shown and continue to show is truly extraordinary and necessary in helping the public have access to their historical record through media,” said Sarah Harrison, WikiLeaks Investigations Editor and Director of the Courage Foundation. WikiLeaks and Harrison ensured Edward Snowden’s safe exit from Hong Kong and secured his asylum. “We cannot thank these cultural icons enough for showing their support.”
The announcement coincides with the expanded theatrical release of Laura Poitras’ critically acclaimed documentary CitizenFour — providing a first-hand account of Edward Snowden’s disclosure of the NSA’s mass surveillance program.
“As Albert Camus once put it, governments, by definition, do not have consciences; they have policies and nothing more. Therefore, it is up to all of us as free-thinking citizens to demand truly transparent democracy and high, unbiased moral standards from those who govern us,” said Viggo Mortensen. “I hope everyone can chip in to support Snowden and those patriotic whistleblowers that come after him.”
Signed by Susan Sarandon, Russell Brand, Peter Sarsgaard, M.I.A., Thurston Moore, David Berman, Vivienne Westwood, Alfonso Cuaròn and several other artists and intellectuals, the statement praises the work of whistleblowers such as Snowden, highlighting the need to support these individuals as they face social and legal persecution for their revelations to the public.
The statement reads:
We stand in support of those fearless whistleblowers and publishers who risk their lives and careers to stand up for truth and justice. Thanks to the courage of sources like Daniel Ellsberg, Chelsea Manning, Jeremy Hammond, and Edward Snowden, the public can finally see for themselves the war crimes, corruption, mass surveillance, and abuses of power of the U.S. government and other governments around the world. WikiLeaks is essential for its fearless dedication in defending these sources and publishing their truths. These bold and courageous acts spark accountability, can transform governments, and ultimately make the world a better place.
In addition to urging the public to stand in solidarity with Snowden and other whistleblowers, many of the artists are calling on fans to watch CitizenFour, and are raising awareness of the Courage Foundation’s whistleblower defense efforts, which fundraises for the legal and public defense of whistleblowers and campaigns for the protection of truthtellers and the public’s right to know generally.
Said Grammy Award-winning guitarist, Tom Morello:
Those courageous enough to expose the crimes of government and unmask corruption embody the spirit of democracy and justice. Rather than being celebrated as the truth-tellers and champions of accountability that they are, they are persecuted and find themselves the target of a draconian legal system that punishes them for the act of exposing crimes.
Said Vivienne Westwood:
I didn’t ask Edward Snowden to stick his neck out for me. But now that he did I ask myself where would we be without him? The more that the public watches CitizenFour, which documents Edward Snowden’s bravery in revealing the NSA’s massive web of surveillance of the American people, opposition to the government’s assault on civil liberties will grow. I hope that audiences will turn their outrage into action and donate to the Courage Foundation’s Legal Defense Fund to provide legal representation to Snowden and other whistleblowers to counter the government’s unprecedented attack against these brave men and women.
FULL LIST OF SIGNATORIES:
Udi Aloni
Pamela Anderson
Anthony Arnove
Etienne Balibar
Alexander Bard
John Perry Barlow
Radovan Baros
David Berman
Russell Brand
Victoria Brittain
Susan Buck-Morss
Eduardo L. Cadava
Calle 13
Alex Callinicos
Robbie Charter
Noam Chomsky
Scott Cleverdon
Ben Cohen
Sadie Coles
Alfonso Cuaròn
John Deathridge
Costas Douzinas
Roddy Doyle
Bella Freud
Leopold Froehlich
Terry Gilliam
Charlie Glass
Boris Groys
Michael Hardt
P J Harvey
Wang Hui
Fredric Jameson
Brewster Kahle
Hanif Kureishi
Engin Kurtay
Alex Taek-Gwang Lee
Nadir Lahiji
Kathy Lette
Ken Loach
Maria Dolores Galán López
Sarah Lucas
Mairead Maguire
Tobias Menzies
M.I.A.
W. J. T. Mitchell
Moby
Thurston Moore
Tom Morello
Viggo Mortensen
Jean-Luc Nancy
Bob Nastanovich
Antonio Negri
Brett Netson
Rebecca O’Brien
Joshua Oppenheimer
John Pilger
Alexander Roesler
Avital Ronell
Pier Aldo Rovatti
Susan Sarandon
Peter Sarsgaard
Assumpta Serna
Vaughan Smith
Ahdaf Soueif
Oliver Stone
Cenk Uygur
Yanis Varoufakis
Peter Weibel
Vivienne Westwood
Tracy Worcester
Slavoj Zizek
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For more information, or for interview with the Courage Foundation, please contact Yasmina Dardari at yasmina@fitzgibbonmedia.com