President Morales to RT: Bolivia to consider Snowden asylum request if submitted

Bolivian President Evo Morales has told RT his country would consider granting asylum to NSA whistleblower Edward Snowden if a request was made. He decried the US as an “empire” with an espionage network stressing Bolivia would “shield the denounced.”
  Speaking to Spanish language RT Actualidad, Evo Morales said that
  Snowden had not filed an asylum application to Bolivia.
  
“If there were a request, of course we would be willing to
  debate and consider the idea,” said Morales. He said that
  Bolivia was aware of the US spy network which repeatedly targets
  countries in Latin America and stressed “Bolivia was there to
  shield the denounced.”
“I know that the Empires have an espionage network and are against the so-called developing countries. And in particular, against those which are rich in natural resources. Bolivia, as well as Venezuela and Ecuador are exposed to constant surveillance from the U.S. Empire,” Morales told RT Actualidad.
  He described the current situation concerning whistleblowers
  Julian Assange and Edward Snowden as “concerning.”
  The Bolivian president is currently in Moscow to attend an energy
  and gas summit along with the President of Venezuela, Nicolas
  Maduro. The head of the Venezuelan government said Caracas was
  ready to consider Snowden’s asylum should he ask for it. 

  Maduro praised the former CIA employee and said he should be
  given a “humanitarian medal” for the data he leaked on the
  NSA’s sweeping Prism spy program.
  
"We say and advocate that someone in the world should stand
  with this young man and protect him, the revelations he has made
  with courage serve to change the world," he said earlier in
  the week on a visit to Haiti.
  
  The Obama Administration has filed an extradition order against
  Snowden under the espionage act and appealed to all countries in
  the northern hemisphere to do their utmost to return him to US
  jurisdiction.
  
  Snowden, for his part, has requested asylum in 21 countries, but
  is currently unable to leave the transit zone of Moscow’s
  Sheremetyevo airport because his American passport has been
  cancelled. The Kremlin said on Tuesday that Snowden did make an
  application for asylum to the Russian government, but later
  withdrew the offer.
  
  The whistleblower reportedly took issue with the condition that
  he should refrain from activities that might damage the US.
  
“There is one condition if he wants to remain here: he must
  stop his work aimed at damaging our American partners.” Putin
  told a media conference in Moscow on Monday.
  
The Kremlin has stressed that Snowden is not a Russian agent and the authorities have at no point collaborated with him.













