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Edward Snowden said he was grateful for the
nomination
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Edward Snowden shortlisted for EU's Sakharov prize
Edward Snowden, the
fugitive American former intelligence worker, has made the shortlist of three
for the Sakharov prize, Europe's top human rights award.
Mr Snowden was
nominated by Green politicians in the European Parliament for leaking details
of US surveillance.
Nominees also include
Malala Yousafzai, the Pakistani teenager shot in the head for demanding
education for girls.
Former recipients of
the prize, awarded by the European Parliament, include Nelson Mandela and Aung San
Suu Kyi.
Mr Snowden's
nomination recognised that his disclosure of US surveillance activities was an
"enormous service" to human rights and European citizens, the
parliament's Green group said.
Snowden, who has
sought asylum in Russia, said in a statement read out in parliament that he was
grateful to Europe's politicians for "taking up the challenge of mass
surveillance".
"The surveillance
of whole populations, rather than individuals, threatens to be the greatest
human rights challenge of our time," he said.
The Sakharov prize for
freedom of thought is awarded annually in memory if Andrei Sakharov, a Soviet
scientist and dissident.
The winner of this
year's prize will be announced on 10 October.
The third nominee for
the award is a group of Belarusian political dissidents jailed in 2010 for
protesting against the disputed re-election of President Alexander Lukashenko.
The group includes
activists Ales Bialiatski, Eduard Lobau and former presidential candidate
Mykola Statkevich.
Mr Bialiatski was also
named as the first person to receive the Council of Europe's Vaclav Havel human
rights prize, worth €61,000 (£50,000, $81,000).

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