ACLU Urges United Nations to Investigate CIA's "Extraordinary Rendition" Policy (3/30/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
NEW YORK – The American Civil Liberties Union today formally called on a
United Nations human rights investigative body, the Working Group on Enforced or
Involuntary Disappearances, to conduct a full investigation into the United
States’ “extraordinary rendition” program.
In a letter submitted to Stephen Toope, Chairman of the U.N. Working Group,
the ACLU cited substantial evidence that the government has unlawfully sent
certain terrorism suspects to secret facilities outside the United States, known
within the CIA as “black sites.” According to the ACLU, these suspects are held
incommunicado and subjected to torture and other inhumane treatment, in
violation of federal and international law.
“We cannot expect to champion human rights around the world if our own
government is violating the rule of law by engaging in secret abductions and
torture,” said Steven Watt, co-author of the letter and a legal advisor with the
ACLU Human Rights Working Group. “The CIA and the Bush administration continue
to refuse to shed any light on the rendition program, and it is now up to the
United Nations to investigate this illegal practice that transcends
borders.”
According to government officials, the United States’ rendition program can
be traced as far back as 1995, but the nature and the scope of the program have
been significantly altered by the Bush administration since the September 11th
attacks. In short, wrote the ACLU in its letter, the rendition program permits
government agents to detain foreign nationals without legal process and employ
interrogation methods that would not be permissible under federal or
international law. These methods include the technique known as “waterboarding,”
which entails strapping a prisoner to a board, covering his face with
cellophane, and pouring water over him to simulate drowning.
Media reports suggest that at least 100 people are currently being held for
interrogation in CIA-run “black sites,” possibly in Afghanistan, Pakistan and
Jordan among other locations.
The ACLU currently represents Khaled El-Masri, a 45-year-old German citizen
and father of five young children, who was kidnapped while on vacation in
Macedonia and subjected to unlawful detention and interrogation for five months.
According to the ACLU, after El-Masri was flown to a clandestine location by
U.S. agents, CIA officials realized that he was innocent but held him
incommunicado for two more months. On December 6, 2005, the ACLU filed a federal
lawsuit against George Tenet, former director of the CIA, and the airline
companies that facilitated El-Masri’s rendition, for the injuries he suffered as
a consequence of the rendition process, including prolonged arbitrary detention,
torture, and other cruel and degrading treatment. That case, El-Masri v. Tenet,
is currently pending in U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of
Virginia.
“Kidnapping an innocent man and sending him to a secret location to be
tortured is not only illegal, it is immoral,” said Ben Wizner, a staff attorney
with the ACLU and co-author of the letter. “We need a full and complete
investigation of a policy that has allowed countless detainees, some of them
entirely innocent, to be tortured in our names.”
In its letter to Toope, the ACLU said the rendition program violates
international treaties and customary international law binding on the United
States, including the U.N. Convention Against Torture and the International
Covenant on Civil and Political Rights.
The ACLU also said the program violates the United States’ own federal laws.
In addition to violating the Fifth and Eighth Amendments of the U.S.
Constitution – which ensure due process of law and ban “cruel and unusual
punishment” – the ACLU said the program is in violation of the Foreign Affairs
Reform and Restructuring Act of 1998, which states “it shall be the policy of
the United States not to expel, extradite, or otherwise effect the involuntary
return of any person to a country in where there are substantial grounds for
believing the person would be in danger of being subjected to torture.” The ACLU
said the program also violates the Alien Tort Claims Act and the Torture Victim
Protection Act, which prohibit torture and other cruel, inhuman or degrading
treatment wherever it occurs.
Recently, both the Council of Europe and the European Parliament have
initiated investigations into European cooperation with the CIA’s practice of
extraordinary rendition and secret detention of terrorism suspects on European
soil. Poland and Romania are conducting national investigations into the
existence of CIA-run “black sites” in their respective countries, and other
European governments, including Germany, are conducting public inquiries into
the rendition program.
For a copy of the letter, go to: www.aclu.org/intlhumanrights/gen/24799lgl20060330.html
For more information on extraordinary rendition and the El-Masri case, go to
www.aclu.org/rendition
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