TORONTO — A Sri Lankan couple who briefly sheltered ex-NSA contractor Edward Snowden in Hong Kong eight years ago arrived with their two children Tuesday in Canada, where authorities granted them protection.
Support our journalism. Subscribe today ArrowRight
Supun Thilina Kellapatha and Nadeeka Dilrukshi Nonis had been living in limbo in Hong Kong after authorities there rejected their asylum claims in 2017.
The couple took Snowden in at the behest of Canadian human rights lawyer, Robert Tibbo, soon after he leaked documents detailing top-secret U.S. surveillance programs. Local media later identified Kellapatha, Nonis and several others, putting their lives at risk, advocates said.
Now in Canada, refugee who helped Snowden urges Trudeau to grant asylum to the others
But on Tuesday, the two refugees and their children — Sethumdi, 9, and Dinath, 5 — landed in Toronto, according to For the Refugees, a nonprofit group that privately sponsored their application for refugee status.
Advertisement
Story continues below advertisement
The family will travel to Montreal, where the group has arranged housing. There, they will be reunited with Vanessa Rodel, another “Snowden refugee," and her daughter, Keana. The two arrived in Canada as refugees in 2019. Kellapatha is Keana’s father.
“After over a decade in limbo, they can now begin to build new lives in Canada, reunited with the rest of their family and free of the constant fear and worry that marked their existence as high-profile asylum seekers in Hong Kong," For the Refugees president, Marc-André Séguin, said in a statement.
Ethan Cox, a spokesman for the organization, said that the separation of the two families has been a “great strain.”
Story continues below advertisement
Now, “they’re really thrilled to be able to say goodbye to Hong Kong," Cox said. He added: “The situation in Hong Kong is not good ... it’s a very, very unsafe place, especially for high-profile asylum seekers.”
Edward Snowden to apply for Russian citizenship
When Snowden first arrived in Hong Kong, he stayed at a ritzy hotel — but soon went underground after outing himself as the whistleblower who leaked details about the National Security Agency’s Prism surveillance program.
Advertisement
Tibbo, who was helping Snowden, asked a group of asylum-seeker clients living in Hong Kong’s cramped tenements if they would shelter an American contractor. The group, which included Kellapatha, Nonis and Rodel, agreed.
Story continues below advertisement
Snowden, who now faces multiple criminal charges in the United States, stayed with them for two weeks before fleeing to Russia where he was granted asylum.
It wasn’t until 2016, when the Oliver Stone film “Snowden" was released, that the role of the asylum-seekers was revealed.
Another “Snowden refugee” from Sri Lanka, Ajith Pushpakumara, remains in Hong Kong, Cox said, and For the Refugees is urging the Canadian government to expedite his application.
“We hope that the Canadian government will expedite the processing of his application and then allow him to join the others in Canada without delay,” he said.
Read more:
U.S. charges Snowden with espionage
Federal judge orders Edward Snowden to forfeit book, speech proceeds totaling more than $5 million so far
First of the ‘Snowden refugees’ has been granted asylum in Canada