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Italian judge indicts CIA agents for illegal kidnapping
By Richard Tyler
19 February 2007
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The US policy of extraordinary renditionsthe
illegal kidnap and transportation of supposed terror suspects
to secret detention sites where they are then torturedwas
the subject of both an Italian legal investigation and a critical
report by the European Parliament last week.
An Italian judge has indicted 26 Americans and 5 Italians for
involvement in the kidnapping of Egyptian cleric Abu Omar on the
streets of Milan in 2003. Abu Omar (real name, Hassan Mustafa
Mosama Nasr) was abducted in Milan, taken to Aviano Air Base and
then flown via Ramstein in Germany to Egypt, where he says he
was tortured. The indictment is the first time the practice of
extraordinary rendition could face scrutiny in open court, with
the trial set to begin in June.
Abu Omar was released last week, when an Egyptian court ruled
his detention was unfounded.
All but one of the Americans involved in the kidnapping have
been identified as CIA agents, including former CIA Milan station
chief Robert Seldon Lady, former Rome station chief Jeffrey Castelli
and US Air Force Lieutenant Colonel Joseph Romano, stationed at
Aviano at the time. None of the accused are said to be in the
country.
The five Italians indicted included former chief of military
intelligence General Nicolo Pollari and his deputy, Marco Mancini.
Pollari, who claims he is unable to defend himself in court
since his defence would involve disclosing evidence that is classified
top secret, has threatened to call former Prime Minister Silvio
Berlusconi and his successor Romano Prodi as witnesses.
The Prodi governmenta coalition that includes the supposedly
left-wing Rifondazione Comunista (Communist Refoundation)is
continuing the attempts of its conservative predecessors to delay
or derail the case, having requested a ruling from the Constitutional
Court on whether prosecutors exceeded their powers in gathering
evidence by tapping the phones of Italian secret service agents.
This could delay the launching of any formal extradition proceedings
against the Americans accused.
The Milan prosecutor in charge of the case, Armando Spatero,
defended his investigation, saying his original extradition request
had been made to the previous Berlusconi government, before knowledge
of the involvement of Italian secret service operatives in the
kidnapping.
He also denies breaching any laws in gathering evidence: The
law allows the government to give a negative response, but not
to fail to respond to the extradition request.
In a barbed attack on the Prodi administration, Spatero added,
The silence of this government by now exceeds the length
of silence of the previous government.
Prodi has also faced censure from within his government. Infrastructure
Minister Antonio Di Pietrowho gained his reputation as a
prosecutor during the Mani Pulite (clean hands) investigations
into widespread political corruption in the 1990scriticised
the absence of any official request for the extradition of the
American agents.
Just before the Italian judiciary launched its case against
the CIA agents for their illegal kidnapping of Abu Omar, the European
Union parliament voted to accept a highly critical report into
secret CIA flights in Europe used to carry alleged terror suspects
to third countries where they could be tortured.
The report, drafted by the Temporary Committee on the alleged
use of European countries by the CIA for illegal activities (TDIP),
says there were at least 1,245 secret CIA flights
in Europe between 2001 and 2005.
In preparing its report to the European Parliament, TDIP heard
hours of testimony from victims of the renditions policy, their
lawyers or representatives, and found that the majority of cases
involved incommunicado detention and torture during
interrogation. Hearings also quizzed senior EU officials and studied
flight data from the EU air traffic agency.
The report meticulously documents the many stopovers inside
the EU by CIA-operated planes as they transported so-called terrorist
suspects into the hands of their torturers. These include:
* Germany336 stopovers
* United Kingdom170
* Ireland147
* Portugal91
* Spain68
* Greece64
* Cyprus57
* Italy46
In voting to accept the report382 for, with 256 against
and 74 abstentionsthe European Parliament explicitly rejected
extraordinary renditions as an illegal instrument used by
the USA in the fight against terrorism. Furthermore, the
majority of MEPs condemned the acceptance and concealing
of the practice, on several occasions, by the secret services
and governmental authorities of certain European countries.
The report deplores the passivity of several member
states, and notes that some of the secret detention facilities
may have been located at US bases in Europe. Several governments
refused to cooperate with its investigations or were evasive.
These included Austria, Italy, Poland, Portugal and the UK.
Conservative MEPs derided the criticism of the US contained
in the report as anti-Americanism. They said that
the CIA should be free to operate secretly in Europeas
long as they comply with the law!
The report endorsed by the European Parliament demands the
closure of Guantanamo and calls on European countries to immediately
seek the return of their citizens and residents who are being
held illegally by US authorities.
The European Parliament has no powers to hold member governments
to account for their complicity in the CIA rendition flights.
Regardless of any critical noises emanating from Brussels, European
governments are uniformly stepping up their attacks on democratic
rights across the continent.
See Also:
Italian court considers trial
against CIA agents in rendition case
[29 January 2007]
Italian government
implicated in cover-up of US rendition
[10 November 2006]
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