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Document proves European Union agreed to CIA rendition flights
By Chris Marsden
17 December 2005
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Attempts by European governments to deny knowledge their airports
were used by the CIA to fly detainees to facilities where they
could be tortured has unravelled. A document obtained by the civil
rights group Statewatch confirms that the European Union (EU)
agreed to such flights as part of a wider programme of joint security
operations with the Bush administration in 2003.
Minutes of confidential talks held in Athens on January 22,
2003, prove that EU officials agreed to allow access to their
airports for the United States, and also indicate that the EU
was well aware that such an agreement made them complicit in possible
war crimes. EU officials have confirmed to the media that a full
account of the meeting was circulated to all member governments,
but all references to the agreement were deleted before the record
was made public.
The minutes of the meeting of 31 officials in Athens involved
a US delegation headed by a Justice Department representative,
and was prepared by Greek officials because Greece held the rotating
presidency of the EU at the time. The document was given the title,
New Transatlantic Agenda, EU-US meeting on Justice and Home
Affairs.
In the full unpublished version the following is reported:
Both sides agreed on areas where cooperation could be improved
[including] the exchange of data between border management services,
increased use of European transit facilities to support the
return of criminal/inadmissible aliens, coordination with
regard to false documents training and improving the cooperation
in removals (emphasis added).
Tony Bunyan of Statewatch commented, Whether these US
transit flights are for criminals, inadmissible
aliens or for rendition the same questions arise. Do EU
governments know how many times their airports have been used
for transit by US government flights? Which airports are used?
How many people have been moved in this way? How many criminals
and how many inadmissible aliens? If they do then
why are the facts and figures not available? And if they do not
know, why not? If EU governments do not know who is being moved
and where by foreign agencies using their airports then they are
grossly irresponsible. To aid and abet the movement
of people in an inhuman or degrading way or to be tortured is
a crime.
EU member states would rather be accused of irresponsibility
than to be found to have knowingly participated in a crimehence
their being forced to agree to various investigations into renditions.
But this has been accompanied by repeated denials of any knowledge
of what was going on, despite hundreds of CIA flights being logged
by plane spotters across Europeparticularly in Germany and
Britain.
With regard to the latest revelations and how the report of
the Athens discussion was censored, a spokesman for the EU Council
of Ministers said this section had been deleted along with others
referring to US policy as a courtesy to Washington.
In fact, the US was the state least interested in maintaining
secrecy about renditions. It was official policy and the Bush
administration had been openly lobbying EU member states for their
support and cooperation. For example, on February 23, 2004, an
earlier meeting between the EU and the US took place in Dublin
under the same New Transatlantic Agenda. The US proposed
various measures to strengthen Europes anti-terrorist capabilities,
but the most significant with respect to renditions and torture
was to adopt legislation allowing national security
intelligence information from a third state to be used
in a criminal proceeding.
The main objection to the use of such evidence from a third
state is that it often comes from regimes that practice torture.
In order to circumvent such considerations, the US proposed that
the use of such information would only be subject to the
conditions, if any, agreed upon between the competent authorities
in the originating State and those in the receiving Statethe
competent authorities being security services and governments.
If this legislation was implemented the agreement on such conditions
would override the power of the courts.
The heat on both the US and Europes governments was also
turned up by an initial report on December 13 by Dick Marty, the
Swiss senator investigating allegations of secret CIA prisons
for the Council of Europe, a 46-state body overseeing human rights
issues. He issued a statement after a Paris meeting of the council
that his information so far reinforces the credibility of
the allegations concerning the transfer and temporary detention
of individuals, without any judicial involvement, in European
countries.
Marty stated that CIA prisoners in Europe were apparently abducted
and moved between countries illegally and that he believed collaboration
by European secret services over the flights went well beyond
exchanges of information, I think it would have been difficult
for these actions to have taken place without a degree of collaboration,
he said.
Having said this much, he then offered a get-out for the EU
states, suggesting that it is possible that secret services
did not inform their governments. If it were proved that
European governments did know about the renditions, he warned,
they would stand accused of having seriously breached their
human rights obligations to the Council of Europe.
Marty said he did not think the US was still holding prisoners
in Europe, and had probably moved them to North Africa last monthmost
likely to Morocco.
Franco Frattini, EU commissioner for justice and home affairs,
has pledged his full support for an inquiry into whether the CIA
maintained secret facilities in European statesPoland and
Romania have been named. He told members of the European parliament
in Strasbourg that international agencies should forward satellite
imagery and flight data to the Council of Europe, as requested
by Marty. However, Frattini made clear that he did not endorse
Martys statement that it was credible the US
had broken the law by temporarily detaining prisoners in Europe
and shipping them across borders. There is no evidence confirming
allegations that have been made, he claimed. No accusations
can be considered founded without evidence.
In Britain, James Crawford, Whewell professor of international
law at Cambridge University, told an all-party parliamentary group
set up to investigate renditions that the British government would
also be breaking the law if it failed to investigate allegations
that the CIA transferred terrorist suspects via Britain. Credible
information suggesting that foreign nationals are being transported
by officials of another state, via the United Kingdom, to detention
facilities for interrogation under torture, would imply a breach
of the [UN torture] convention and must be investigated,
he said.
Crawford stated that the government could not rely on the assurances
provided by Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice to avoid being
accused of breaking its international obligations to stop prisoners
being sent for torture.
Prime Minister Tony Blair, Foreign Secretary Jack Straw and
other officials are continuing to stonewall on the issue.
Asked in parliament about reports of 400 suspected CIA flights
passing through British airports, Blair said, In respect
of airports, I dont know what you are referring to.
On December 14, he dismissed calls to probe all US government
air traffic movements through Britain. He restated his governments
lack of knowledge about rendition flights, adding, The idea
that we should be investigating every time a [US] government plane
flies into this country is completely absurd.
Straw told parliament he believed the assurances provided by
his own officials and Rice that the US had not used British airports
to transfer detainees, telling MPs, There is simply no truth
in the claim that the UK is involved in rendition.
In Germany, the Christian Democrat-Social Democrat coalition
government led by Angela Merkel also stands accused of collaboration
with renditions, including the abduction, detention and torture
of Khaled al-Masri, a German of Lebanese descent. Masri was seized
in 2001 by the CIA in Macedonia and flown to Afghanistan, where
he was held and interrogated for five months.
During an emergency parliamentary debate on Masris case,
Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier said that the German
authorities had not been involved in the abduction and imprisonment
of al-Masri, and had not known about it until after he had been
released. According to a report in the Washington Post,
in May 2004, prior to Masris release, the then US ambassador
to Germany, Daniel Coats, had told Interior Minister Otto Schily
that Masri had been wrongfully detained and requested that the
German government keep silent on the issue.
See Also:
The case of Khalid al-Masri
German government complicit in the criminal activities of the
CIA
[17 December 2005]
European governments make their peace
with Washington on abductions, torture
[9 December 2005]
German Chancellor Merkel covers up for
illegal CIA practices
[9 December 2005]
Rice defends illegal renditions,
threatens to reveal European complicity
[6 December 2005]
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