ACLU Applauds Europeans for Investigating Rendition and Torture Claims, Effort Called a Model for U.S. (5/11/2006)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.orgNEW YORK - The
American Civil Liberties Union met today with delegates from the European
Parliament to discuss the initial results of their investigation to determine
whether "the CIA or other US agents ... have carried out abductions,
'extraordinary rendition', detention at secret sites, detention incommunicado or
torture or other cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment of prisoners on the
territory of the European Union" in violation of numerous European and
International laws.
Delegates of the committee have been in Washington, DC
this week to meet with government officials and representatives of NGOs to
discuss the findings contained in its draft report dated April 24, 2006.
In
a related matter, the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia
will hear oral arguments tomorrow in the historic lawsuit El-Masri v. Tenet, in
which Khaled El-Masri, a German citizen who was an innocent victim of the
CIA's "extraordinary rendition" policy, will challenge his abduction, detention
and interrogation in a secret overseas prison at the hands of CIA operatives.
The ACLU represents El-Masri.
According to Steven Watt, an advisor to the
ACLU's Human Rights Program, was among those who met with the delegation in
Washington DC, "Revelations that the CIA sponsored the illegal detention and
torture of individuals kidnapped in European countries shocked the moral
conscience of the world. Americans were stunned and bewildered, believing that
their country was governed by laws and principles that forbid such crimes. As we
have come to understand, however, our president is implementing policies that
are steadily eroding our laws and our values while creating a government cloaked
in secrecy and shielded from accountability. In stark contrast, the Europeans
are undertaking a thorough examination of what happened and what laws might have
been broken. This effort serves as a model for the United States, which has gone
to extreme measures to prevent the truth from being uncovered. We applaud the
European Committee for their tireless and noble work and hope our government
will take note of their approach."
Ann Beeson, the ACLU Associate Legal
Director was also at the meeting with European delegation.
The European
Parliament's draft report from the included the following pronouncements:
- "[S]erious and inadmissible violations of fundamental human rights have, since
11 September 2001 and as part of the essential action to combat terrorism, taken
place on several occasions."
- "[T]he CIA has on several occasions been
clearly responsible for the illegal abduction and detention of alleged
terrorists on the territory of Member States and for extraordinary renditions
and that, in a number of cases, this has concerned European nationals."
-
"[The Committee c]onsiders it implausible, on the basis of the testimonies and
documents received to date, that certain European governments were not aware of
the extraordinary rendition activities taking place on their territory and in
their airspace or airports."
- [The Committee s]tresses that the prohibition
of torture, as the latter term is defined in Article 1 of the United Nations
Convention against Torture, is absolute and allows no exceptions whether in
times of war or threat of war, domestic political instability or any other
emergency; recalls that cases of incommunicado detention, abduction or
extraordinary rendition must also be considered violations of fundamental rights
under international law and are therefore to be condemned as acts involving the
use of torture or inhuman and degrading treatment.
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