Russia yet to receive Snowden asylum request

Russia has still not received an application for asylum from Edward Snowden fueling speculation over his intentions. The NSA leaker is reportedly healthy and has all his necessities provided for in Moscow’s Sheremetyevo Airport.
  Several days have passed since Snowden’s announcement he would
  apply for Russian asylum and Moscow says it still has not
  received a formal request.
  
  “There has been no application from Edward Snowden today,”
  Konstantin Romadanovsky, director of Russia’s Federal Migration
  Service told Interfax. “If an application is received it will
  be examined under the established legal procedures.”
  
  The whistleblower dominated world headlines on Friday when he
  called an unexpected press conference at Sheremetyevo.
  
  Snowden dispelled some of the doubts surrounding his
  circumstances, but some are arguing that the whistleblower’s
  intentions are still unclear. Tatyana Lokshina, representative of
  the Moscow branch of the Human Rights Watch who attended Friday’s
  conference, said she did not understand Snowden’s motives.
  
“When a meeting like this is held, you expect some sort of
  outcome. I would say that nothing happened other than the
  representatives seeing with their own eyes that Snowden really is
  alive and well in Sheremetyevo Airport,” Lokshina told
  Interfax. She stressed that the overall message from Snowden was
  vague and devoid of any specifics.
  
“I don’t understand why Snowden invited us. Was he behind it?
  Was he the instigator of the meeting?”

  The former CIA employee declared his official status as an
  ‘asylee’ on Friday and appealed for help in guaranteeing his safe
  passage to Latin America. He said he welcomed the offers for
  asylum made by Bolivia, Venezuela and Nicaragua, adding that he
  had been made stateless and been “hounded for his act of
  political expression.”
  
  The US has issued an extradition request for Snowden under
  espionage charges and accused Russia of granting him a
  “propaganda platform.”
  Russia had previously said that it would be willing to grant
  Snowden asylum if he refrained from releasing any more
  information that could be potentially damaging to the US.
  Lokshina said on Friday that Snowden had no more secrets to
  disclose and that his “job was done.”
  In spite of Snowden’s three-week-long stint in the airport’s
  transit zone, sources have assured that he is healthy and in good
  spirits.
  
“Judging by the fact that he has not approached the airport’s
  medical team, he feels good and is not complaining,” a source
  from inside the airport told Interfax, adding that he looked
  well.
  
“He can take a shower and get a haircut - with his own money
  of course,” said the source.
  
  The US fugitive arrived in Moscow on June 23 from Hong Kong,
  where he initially took refuge after releasing the classified
  information that blew the whistle on the NSA’s mass, covert
  surveillance program PRISM.
  













