US whistle-blower Edward Snowden gets Russian passport, takes citizenship oath
- The ex-intelligence contractor, who fled the US after leaking information on classified surveillance programmes, had ended up in Moscow via Hong Kong
- It is unclear if Snowden has renounced his US citizenship; his US passport was revoked in 2013
Former US intelligence contractor Edward Snowden, who fled prosecution after revealing highly classified surveillance programmes, has received a Russian passport and taken the citizenship oath, Russian news agencies quoted his lawyer as saying on Friday.
Lawyer Anatoly Kucherena was reported as saying that Snowden got the passport and took the oath on Thursday, about three months after Russian President Vladimir Putin granted him citizenship.
The reports did not specify whether Snowden has renounced his US citizenship. The United States revoked his passport in 2013, leading to Snowden being stranded in a Moscow airport for weeks after arriving from Hong Kong, aiming to reach Ecuador.
Russia eventually granted him permanent residency. He married American Lindsay Mills in 2017, and the couple have two children.
In Washington, State Department spokesman Ned Price said on Friday that the US was aware of reports Snowden had finalised his Russian citizenship but could not confirm them, and referred questions about his status to the Russian government.