Apart from the Washington Post, whose Dana Priest has been on the torture story since late 2002, mainstream media sources in the U.S. do not even hint at its existence. -- But the Bush administration is actively engaged in the operation of a secret system of detention and interrogation centers around the world. -- In the name of the "war on terror," the U.S. and its proxies seize and torture whomsoever they please in the facilities of this secret gulag. -- An excellent piece of sleuthing by Stephen Grey and Andrew Buncombe of the London Independent, published Thursday, tells how unmarked executive jets like the white unmarked Gulfstream jet registered N379P (since changed) and the white unmarked Boeing 737 described below are operated by CIA front companies and used to shuttle inmates about the top-secret system. -- The policy of "extraordinary rendition" is the legal cover employed, and the system involves the cooperation of U.S. client and friendly states like Egypt, Jordan, Afghanistan, Pakistan, Iraq -- and, as we see here, the U.K. -- In June 2004, Human Rights First published a 47-page report on the system. -- Such operations explain why Alberto Gonzales was so extraordinarily evasive while responding to questions about torture during his pre-confirmation hearings before the Senate Judiciary Committee....
News
UK
Crime
BRITAIN ACCUSED OVER CIA'S SECRET TORTURE FLIGHTS By Stephen Grey
and Andrew Buncombe
** U.K. airports are believed to be operational bases for two executive jets
used by the CIA to carry out 'renditions' of terror suspects. **
Independent (UK) February 10, 2005
http://news.independent.co.uk/uk/crime/story.jsp?story=609538 or http://www.truthout.org/docs_2005/021005C.shtml
Britain's intelligence agencies have been accused of helping America in a
secret operation that is sending terror suspects to Middle Eastern countries
where prisoners are routinely tortured and abused.
Since 11 September 2001, the CIA has been systematically seizing suspects and
sending them, without legal process, not only to Guantanamo Bay but to
authorities in countries such as Egypt, Jordan and Syria. Human rights
campaigners say the system, officially known as "extraordinary rendition" is a
system of torture by proxy.
Britain maintains the main reason it will not deport prisoners being held
without charge at Belmarsh prison is the fear they will be tortured or otherwise
abused by their home country. But a series of cases has emerged which, critics
say, exposes the Government's dishonesty by suggesting information provided by
Britain about its citizens and residents has led to the capture and eventual
torture of Islamic terrorist suspects.
Britain is also an operational base for two executive jets regularly used by
the CIA to carry out so-called "renditions." One Gulfstream jet -- used for
taking prisoners to Egypt and Jordan from countries including Sweden and
Indonesia -- has called regularly at Luton, Glasgow, Prestwick and Northolt
airports.
A Boeing 737 jet, used for the transfer of prisoners, passed through Glasgow
airport on Monday morning on its way to Iraq. Both jets are white and unmarked,
apart from their US civilian registration. Inquiries suggest they are owned by
U.S. companies that exist only on paper and which are almost certainly a front
for the CIA.
Michael Ratner, the director of the Center for Constitutional Rights, which
is representing several former prisoners who were "renditioned," said: "It is a
secret process. No one really knows what happens in the rendition process or in
the gulag of secret CIA hellholes [where some prisoners are sent]."
One notorious rendition occurred in Sweden in December 2001 when a team of
masked U.S. agents arrived to transfer two Egyptian dissidents, both accused of
terrorist involvement, to Cairo. Both complained later of torture.
But there is evidence that intelligence originating in Britain may have been
behind the CIA's involvement in the seizure of at least one of the Egyptians, an
asylum-seeker named Mohamed al-Zery, who, after months of torture, was
eventually cleared and freed.
Yassir al-Sirri, an Islamic activist living in London who is accused by Egypt
and America of having al-Qa'ida connections, said that, in the weeks before his
own arrest in London in October 2001, he had been in touch with Mr. Zery, who
wanted help with collecting information for his asylum claim.
Speaking to BBC Radio's "File on Four," Mr Sirri said that when British
anti-terrorist officers raided his home, they took his computer and his fax
records and those were passed to the Americans.
"Later in Sweden this man, Mr. Zehry, was arrested and this information could
only have come from the British authorities. They are completely responsible.
It's criminal," Mr. Sirri said.
Mr. Sirri discovered later that, in the following weeks, many of his contacts
around the world were seized. Mr. Sirri, who runs an Islamic media center
devoted to exposing any human rights abuses, had contacts with many families of
prisoners.
Mr. Sirri had been arrested over accusations he was involved in the murder of
the Afghan leader, Ahmed Shah Massood, but he was cleared when a U.K. judge
described him as an "innocent fall guy." Efforts by both the U.S. and Egypt to
extradite him for alleged links to terrorism have failed.
In Stockholm, Kjell Jonsson, Mr. Zehry's lawyer, said he also believed that
information passed by Britain was the only explanation for his client's arrest
and the involvement of American agents.
The practice of sending suspects abroad for coercive interrogation gathered
pace after 11 September 2001, when a senior counter-terrorism officer, Cofer
Black, openly admitted that after the al-Qa'ida attacks "the gloves came off."
The procedure was supported by legal memos drafted by the White House
Counsel, Alberto Gonzales, which claimed the Bush administration was not
restricted by the Geneva Conventions when dealing with suspects from the
so-called war on terror.
Michael Scheuer, a former senior CIA official involved in setting up the
system, said: "The practice of capturing people and taking them to second or
third countries arose because the Executive assigned the job of dismantling
terrorist cells to the CIA.
"When the agency came back and said 'where do you want to take them?' The
message was -- 'that's your job.' "
Mr. Scheuer claims there was legal oversight in every renditioning case and
yet he admitted suspects were tortured.
"The bottom line is, getting anyone off the street who you are confident has
been involved, or is planning to be involved, in operations that could kill
Americans is a worthwhile activity."
Just how many suspects have been subjected to renditioning is unclear.
Critics point out that the U.S. does not permit suspects access to lawyers.
They liken the secrecy to that which is surrounding the network of secret
detention centers operated by the CIA around the world in places such as
Afghanistan, Iraq, Guantanamo Bay, on U.S. ships and on any number of locations
that have not been publicly disclosed.
But the planes used by the CIA have left a trail. The Gulfstream, then
registered as N379P, was first spotted landing at Shannon airport, Ireland, in
spring 2003. Its registration number, since changed, was logged by members of a
peace camp. They only learned that it was the rendition plane when they were
later contacted by Swedish journalists investigating the torture of the two
Egyptians. "It just looked like a civilian plane," said Edward Horgan, 59, from
Limerick, one of the witnesses to its landing.
American journalists have revealed the plane is formally owned by Bayard
Foreign Marketing, which lists its headquarters as the address of a lawyer in
Portland, Oregon. There is no evidence that Thomas Bayard, whose signature
appears on documents filed with the local authorities, is a real person. When
the Independent called the firm, there was nobody there, just an
answering machine.
The allegations that Britain is co-operating with the "rendition" system are
also bolstered by arrests in Gambia, west Africa, where four British residents
were arrested and questioned by U.S. agents in November 2002, apparently after a
tip-off from British authorities.
Wahab al Rawi, an engineer whose family fled persecution in Iraq, was
surprised to be questioned in Gambia by U.S. agents when he had already been
interviewed and freed by Britain's security service, MI5, back in London.
They had been asking him about his family's friendship with Abu Qatada, a
radical Islamic cleric now in detention at Belmarsh prison. When Mr. Rawi asked
to see the British high commissioner, he said he was told: "Who do you think
ordered your arrest?"
Though Mr. Rawi was released, his brother Bisher and a business partner,
Jamil al-Banaa, were picked up by the Americans, apparently in the Gulfstream.
They are still being held in Guantanamo Bay.
Another case pointing to Britain's involvement is the arrest of Martin
Mubanga in Zambia. Last weekend, after being freed from Guantanamo Bay, he
alleged his original arrest came after the involvement, and accusations made
against him, of an MI6 officer.
Craig Murray, the former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, has also accused
Britain of complicity in torture, because of the use that MI6 makes of the
intelligence gathered in this way by CIA.
He said many prisoners of Uzbek origin captured by American forces were taken
back to Uzbek jails where they suffered the most brutal torture. Information
obtained from these interrogations ended up in MI6 reports that he received. "I
was told by the Foreign Office's senior legal adviser that there was nothing in
law to prevent us obtaining and using material which had been extracted under
torture provided that we had not ourselves done the torture," he said. "And MI6
said they found the intelligence useful. I was shattered and disillusioned."
A Foreign Office spokesman said Britain condemned torture but could not
ignore intelligence from sources. "Without the sharing of intelligence, there
would have been many more bloody terrorist attacks that would have gone ahead,
like the plan to bomb a Christmas market in Strasbourg.
"If you have an agreement to work together against terrorism with another
country then it's obvious common sense that one has to have a certain amount of
trust in that country and in the way it chooses to use that intelligence." |