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Italy: Trial of CIA agents deferred until October
By Marianne Arens
30 June 2007
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On June 18, a Milan court decided to defer to October the trial
of those charged with abducting the Egyptian expatriate Imam Osama
Hassan Nasr, also known as Abu Omar. Judge Oscar Magi agreed to
the motion of the defence lawyer representing the main Italian
defendant, the former chief of Italian Military Intelligence (SISMI),
Nicolò Pollari.
There are a total of 33 defendants, including 26 operatives
of the CIA and a lieutenant in the US Air Force. They stand accused
of abducting Nasr from the streets of Milan and secretly transporting
him to an Egyptian prison, where he was held for four years and
brutally tortured.
It is the first trial of secret service and military personnel
anywhere in the world for the US governments practice of
extraordinary renditionthe kidnapping and transport
of alleged terrorist suspects to secret prisons, where they can
be subject to torture. The American defendants are being tried
in absentia.
The deferment of the trial will enable the Italian Supreme
Court to make a ruling on the case. The government of Prime Minister
Romano Prodi has petitioned the court to either halt the case
altogether, or only admit part of the available evidence. The
government has accused the Milan prosecutor of jeopardising Italian
state secrets, since the prosecution case relies on transcripts
of phone calls by SISMI agents.
The prosecution has rejected the governments petition,
arguing that it is impermissible to use the argument of
state secrecy to conceal facts that might threaten the constitutional
order.
Having petitioned for a postponement when the case opened on
June 8, the defence has welcomed the deferment as an initial success,
hoping that a trial may be prevented.
Pollaris attorney has based his defence strategy on the
argument that a high-ranking representative of the Italian government
agreed to the abduction at the time. He wants to call as defence
witnesses Prodi and former Prime Minister Silvio Berlusconi, both
of whom refused to enter an official request to the US government
for the extradition of the 26 accused Americans.
Nasrs attorney Carmelo Scambia also welcomed the deferment.
Calling Judge Magis decision balanced, he said
it was better to begin the trial when all obstacles had been removed.
Nasr intends to appear as a prosecution witness. He has told
reporters that he was turned into a human wreck while
in his Egyptian gaol. His kidneys were been damaged by constant
beatings, and his ears injured. He finds it painful and difficult
to walk.
Nasr has also accused the German government in connection with
his abduction. Germany shares responsibility for my fate,
he told Spiegel Online. He claims he was searched and photographed
by CIA agents at the American Air Force base at Ramstein, Germany.
See Also:
Trial of CIA agents for abduction of
expatriate Egyptian imam opens in Milan
[9 June 2007]
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