Snowden deals blow to ‘global electronic prison camp’ – Russian Orthodox Church
by alethoRT | July 30, 2013
Archpriest
Vsevolod Chaplin has praised Russian authorities for not caving in to
pressure from abroad, saying granting asylum to US whistleblower Edward
Snowden would help prevent the establishment of a ‘global electronic
prison camp’.
“It
is encouraging news that Russia is demonstrating its independence in
this case as it has in many others, despite the pressure” said the head
of the Holy Synod’s Department for Relations between the Church and
Society.
Vsevolod
Chaplin added that the Snowden saga has been broadly discussed both on
the domestic and international level, with Russia’s position potentially
bolstering its image as a country upholding “the true freedom of
ideals.”
The
Russian cleric further argued that Snowden’s revelations confirmed the
existence of a pernicious problem discussed by Orthodox Christians for
many years – “the prospective of a global electronic-totalitarian prison
camp”.
“First
they get people addicted to convenient means of communication with the
authorities, businesses and among each other. In a while people become
rigidly connected to these services and as a result the economic and
political owners of these services get tremendous and terrifying power.
They cannot help feeling the temptation to use this power to control the
personality and such control might eventually be much stricter that all
known totalitarian systems of the twentieth century,” Interfax news
agency quoted Chaplin as saying.
The church official added that in his view true democracy remained an unreachable ideal.
“Any
political system fixes the domination of a few over many. In the
twentieth century the harshest forms of such political power used brute
force, but now they are using soft power, through total data collecting
and through soft persuasion of people, first through slogans but then
through legal acts,” Chaplin explained. He noted that currently the soft
power system was promoting such topics as declaring the western
political system as the only viable option, making religion a marginal
trend, and sidelining both criticism of market fundamentalism and
leftist political platforms.
Chaplin
urged Russian authorities to defend “real freedom, the freedom from the
global ideological dictate and from the electronic prison camp.”
The
cleric also offered a possible solution – the development of its own
electronic communications system that would be independent from
foreign-based mediums. “The nation has the brains for this and I hope we
will also have a will,” Chaplin declared.
Russia
is currently considering Edward Snowden’s request for temporary asylum
and the former NSA contractor still remains in the transit zone of the
Moscow’s Sheremetyevo airport.
The Russian Justice Ministry on Tuesday
sent a formal response to a letter from US Attorney General, who
assured Moscow that Snowden would not face the prospect of death or
torture if handed over to the United States.
The Russian ministry did not provide the details of its reply to the press.
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