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Kidnapping, detention, torture: US renditions
scandal embroils whole of Europe
By Chris Marsden
2 December 2005
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The political scandal over the CIAs transfer of alleged
terrorists to overseas prisons where they are subject to torture
has now embroiled governments throughout Europe.
Airplanes operated by CIA-front companies carrying detainees
have landed many times at European airports before flying off
to countries where the prisoners are held incommunicado and tortured,
with the knowledge and even direct participation of US operatives.
According to press reports, since September 11, 2001 at least
100 prisoners have been subjected to this process of extraordinary
rendition. Some have been kidnapped on European soil or
are European citizens.
Human Rights Watch has said there is strong evidence, including
the flight records of CIA jets transporting prisoners out of Afghanistan,
that Poland and Romania were among countries allowing the CIA
to operate secret detention centres, or black sites.
Allegations that the CIA has run secret prisons in Eastern
European countries were first made in a Washington Post
report by Dana Priest on November 2. The article claimed the US
has maintained secret prisons in eight countries, including Thailand,
Afghanistan and several eastern European states. The Post
did not name the European countries involved at the request of
American officials.
A report by Germanys Berliner Zeitung said 85
CIA flights had taken off or landed at the US Rhein-Main military
air base in Frankfurt between 2002 and 2004headed to such
places as Baghdad, Kabul and the Jordanian capital Amman.
An analysis for the New York Times of 26 planes known
to be operated by CIA front companies shows 307 flights in Europe
since September 2001. There were 94 flights in Germany, the most
in Europe, 76 flights from Britain, 33 from Ireland, 16 from Portugal,
and 15 each from Spain and the Czech Republic. A similar investigation
by the British Guardian newspaper states that when charter
flights are included, the figure for Britain rises to more than
200.
The mounting revelations of these CIA operationsall in
flagrant contravention of international law and the laws of the
European countries involvedare an acute embarrassment for
Europes governments. The existence of CIA detention facilities
in EuropePoland is a European Union (EU) member stateviolates
the European Convention on Human Rights.
The exposure of US-organized disappearances of
targeted individuals and their subjection to torture, and the
role of European governments in allowing and covering up for these
crimes, has evoked public outrage. In Britain, the human rights
group Liberty has asked police to investigate allegations of the
CIAs use of United Kingdom airports for rendition purposes.
Liberty has said that unless action is taken within 14 days, it
will seek legal action against UK police forces for aiding and
abetting in kidnap and torture.
Britains foreign secretary, Jack Straw, has sent a letter
to Washington on behalf of the EU seeking clarification on the
allegations that the CIA has torture camps in Eastern Europe.
Germanys new foreign minister, Frank-Walter Steinmeier,
also raised the issue during his visit to Washington.
Franco Frattini, the EUs foremost justice official, has
warned that any member state discovered to have hosted CIA prisons
will face serious consequences, including losing its
EU voting rights. The Council of Europe has opened a formal inquiry
into the issue under Article 52 of the European Convention on
Human Rights. Investigator Dick Marty has said he wants to examine
satellite photos of the military training camp at Szymany in northeastern
Poland and Kogalniceanu military airport in southern Romania.
Italian prosecutors are seeking the extradition of 22 suspected
CIA operatives from the US, who are charged with abducting Egyptian
national Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr in February 2003. Nasr, who
had been granted political refugee status by Italy, was kidnapped
on the streets of Milan by agents who, according to Italian prosecutors,
were working for the CIA. He was flown to Egypt, where he says
he was tortured.
Investigations have also been mounted by Spain, Sweden and
Norway.
The Bush administration broke its silence on the unfolding
international scandal only this week. The State Department said
that Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice will be prepared to address
the allegations of secret CIA prison camps when she visits Germany,
Romania, Ukraine, and Belgium for a NATO foreign ministers meeting
next week. But Washington made clear that it would not retreat
from its illegal policy. Rice herself told the press, We
have never fought a war like this before where... you cant
allow someone to commit the crime before you detain them.
The Bush administration has one great advantage in taking a
hard line in the face of complaints and inquiries by EU states.
It knows well what others can only speculate about: how much the
European governments knew and how complicit they have been in
the criminal activities of the CIA.
The December 1 edition of the New York Times openly
raises this issue, writing that anger in Europe is accompanied
by looming embarrassment, with suspicion that Americans,
in many cases, operated with the knowledge or consent of local
governments.
Daria Pesce, the lawyer for a former CIA station chief in Milan
who is one of those accused of snatching Hassan Mustafa Osama
Nasr, says, Someone knew... I dont think that it is
possible that an American comes into Italy and kidnaps someone.
It seems really unlikely.
Giuseppe Cucchi, a former three-star Italian general and military
representative to NATO, told the Times, I dont
see why they shouldnt have agreed with our secret services
on an action like that... The condition often put on an action
like that is that, If something comes out, we will declare
that we didnt know anything.
There is, in fact, no possibility that Europes governments
did not know of the CIAs activities. Extraordinary renditions
are official US policy. Reports and articles available on the
Internet have logged the movements of planes run by the CIA ever
since 2001, and the number of these aircraft has increased to
over 26, with ten planes added since 9/11.
Last May, when Amnesty International condemned American human
rights abuses carried out in the name of the war on terrorism
and its secretary general called Guantánamo the gulag
of our time, the US government denounced the human rights
organization. All of the European governments kept silent.
Yet in November last year, the British Sunday Times
reported on the movements of one CIA-run jet believed to be involved
in renditions. The article noted that the plane flew to 49 international
destinations, including Egypt, Jordan, Iraq, Morocco, Afghanistan,
Libya and Uzbekistan. Internet reports and photos showed it making
stopovers in Portugal, Spain and the Czech Republic.
The issue of renditions gained prominence when a series of
legal rulings in the United States in the aftermath of the Abu
Ghraib scandal made it all but impossible to continue to hold
detainees without trial at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba, while
denying them at least some of the rights afforded by US law. The
US Supreme Court had ruled in June of 2004 that federal courts
could hear habeas corpus petitions from Guantánamo detainees
who were contesting their imprisonment.
The Bush administration responded last March by announcing
that half of Guantánamos 540 inmates would be transferred
to prisons in Afghanistan, Saudi Arabia, Yemen and other countries.
This in effect insured that the detainees would be subject to
treatment that contravenes both US and international law.
The announcement focused public attention on a worldwide network
of detention facilities either set up by Washington or established
as a result of its negotiations with other governments in the
aftermath of 9/11.
Newspapers reported that the US was negotiating with various
countries to take Guantánamo detainees. The Times
cited a February 5 memorandum from Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld
urging that pressure be placed on reluctant governments.
The most important article that appeared highlighting Americas
network of detention and torture facilities was by Adrian Levy
and Cathy Scott-Clark in the March 19, 2005 Guardian. It
stated that Afghanistan had become the hub of a global system
of detention centres where prisoners are held incommunicado and
allegedly subjected to torture.
Michael Posner of the US legal watchdog Human Rights First,
said, The detention system in Afghanistan exists entirely
outside international norms, but it is only part of a far larger
and more sinister jail network that we are only now beginning
to understand.
Levy and Scott-Clark reported the existence of unofficial detention
facilities at Gardez, Khost, Asadabad and Jalalabad, as well as
an official detention centre in Kandahar. There are 20 more
facilities in outlying US compounds and fire bases that complement
a major collection centre at Bagram air force base,
they wrote. The CIA has one facility at Bagram and another,
known as the Salt Pit, in an abandoned brick factory
north of Kabul. More than 1,500 prisoners from Afghanistan and
many other countries are thought to be held in such jails, although
no one knows for sure because the US military declines to comment.
Following 9/11, the US had commandeered foreign jails,
built cellblocks at US military bases and established covert CIA
facilities that can be located almost anywhere, from an apartment
block to a shipping container. Terror suspects are being processed
in Afghanistan and in dozens of facilities in Pakistan, Uzbekistan,
Jordan, Egypt, Thailand, Malaysia, Indonesia and the British island
of Diego Garcia in the southern Indian Ocean. Those detained are
held incommunicado, without charge or trial, and frequently shuttled
between jails in covert air transports, giving rise to the recently
coined US military expression ghost detainees.
Syria was another partner in Washingtons network. Levy
and Scott-Clark had obtained prisoner letters, declassified
FBI files, legal depositions, witness statements and testimony
from US and UK officials, which document the alleged methods deployed
in Afghanistanshackles, hoods, electrocution, whips, mock
executions, sexual humiliation and starvationand suggest
they are practised across the network.
The article also drew attention to the use of jets owned and
run by CIA front companiesthe issue that has now hit the
headlines in Europe. Former CIA officer Robert Baer explained,
We pick up a suspect or we arrange for one of our partner
countries to do it. Then the suspect is placed on civilian transport
to a third country where, lets make no bones about it, they
use torture. If you want a good interrogation, you send someone
to Jordan. If you want them to be killed, you send them to Egypt
or Syria. Either way, the US cannot be blamed as it is not doing
the heavy work.
Disproving the recent claims of ignorance and expressions of
outrage emanating from Europes capitals, the article details
the kidnapping of Ahmed Agiza, an Egyptian asylum seeker resident
in Sweden. In December 2001, he was sent back to Egypt. He and
a second Egyptian refugee, Mohammed Al-Zery, had been arrested
by Swedish intelligence acting upon a request from the US: ...driven,
shackled and blindfolded, to Stockholms Bromma airport,
where they were cuffed and cut from their clothes. Suppositories
were inserted into both mens anuses, they were wrapped in
plastic nappies, dressed in jumpsuits and handed over to an American
aircrew who flew them out of Sweden on a private executive jet.
Prisoners told us that Agiza was repeatedly electrocuted,
hung upside down, whipped with an electrical flex and hospitalised
after being made to lick his cell floor clean, the Guardian
reported.
The November 21 edition of Der Spiegel cites another
example of direct collaboration, this time involving Germany.
Mohammed Haydar Zammar, a German citizen, was abducted while he
was in Morocco in November 2001 and sent to a Syrian prison to
be tortured. With the agreement of Syria, German officials flew
to Damascus to interrogate the prisoner, whom they knew was being
tortured.
Britain, Washingtons closest ally, is most heavily implicated
in the renditions scandal. Along with Washington, London is anxious
to utilize torture without being seen to be directly culpable.
On August 11 last year, the Court of Appeals had ruled that evidence
extracted by torture was admissible in UK law. When this was challenged,
the Blair government requested a decision by the Law Lords on
the issue, which is still pending.
Washingtons actions recall the reign of state terror
practiced by US-backed military regimes in Latin America in the
1970s and 1980s, in which thousands of students, trade unionists,
left-wing political figures and journalists were disappeared,
tortured and executed. What is remarkable is not that protests
and investigations have been organised by EU states, but that
Europes response has been so belated and muted.
Europes governments are clearly worried by the possible
political fallout from their alliance with an administration that
utilises methods, borrowed from the handbook of Hitlers
Nazi regime, that were inflicted on the people of German-occupied
Europe during World War II.
But all are complicit in Washingtons criminal actions.
Whatever their reservations about Iraq, they all signed up to
the so-called war on terror that has been used to
legitimise kidnapping, detention and torture. They too are breaking
with democratic norms, which are, in the end, incompatible with
colonial subjugation and the destruction of workers living
standards carried out at the behest of an international financial
oligarchy.
See Also:
Bush, Democrats back protracted war in
Iraq
[1 December 2005]
Bush defends rendition of
detainees to torture regimes
[17 March 2005]
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