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Amnesty International report exposes European complicity in
secret US rendition programme
Part 1: The fate of three Yemenis
By Martin Kreickenbaum
28 April 2006
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The following is the first of a two-part article.
The CIAs illegal abduction and secret imprisonment of
alleged terror suspects has come into sharper focus in recent
months. At the beginning of April, the human rights organization
Amnesty International presented new details on the so-called
practice of rendition. The report also exposes the
complicity of the European governments in the illegal activities
of the CIA.
The Amnesty report titled Below
the radar: Secret flights to torture and disappearance
charts in minute detail the odyssey of three Yemeni citizens through
four US secret prisons in Afghanistan, Djibouti, and probably
Eastern Europe, and documents the hundreds of landings and take-offs
at European airports by planes used by the CIA for illegal abductions.
The statements of three Yemeni men whom Amnesty was
able to contact provide detailed information about the worldwide
network of American secret prisons, or so-called black sites.
Their descriptions show the systematic and organized nature of
the operations carried out by the CIA in abducting, imprisoning,
and abusing such individuals.
Muhammad Faraj Bashmilah and Salah Nasir Salim Ali Qaru
were arrested in October 2003 in Jordan and later handed over
to US security agencies, while Muhammad Abdullah Salah al-Assad
was arrested in Tanzania and transferred directly into US custody.
It was more than 18 months before all three were turned over to
the Yemeni authorities, who then detained them for a further nine
months before they were finally released in March 2006. At no
time were any terror-related charges laid against the three men,
and, indeed, they were never even told what they were suspected
of having done. Their only crime was that of being in the wrong
place at the wrong time.
Muhammad Bashmilah and Salah Qaru were flown by US security
forces directly to Afghanistan and placed in a secret internment
camp there run exclusively by American personnel.
Strict and comprehensive security procedures operated in the
camp. The prisoners were held in solitary confinement in single
cells measuring two by three meters, in which they were permanently
under surveillance by two video cameras. They were shackled to
a ring in the floor of the cell by a chain that was so short that
they were unable to reach the cell door.
When taken for questioning, they were hooded and placed in
handcuffs before the leg irons were unchained from the ring. The
hood contained a loop that could be drawn tightly around the neck
when necessary.
Muhammad al-Assad was first flown from Tanzania to Djibouti,
where he was held for several weeks and cross-examined by two
US security personnel who indicated they came from the FBI. From
Djibouti, al-Assad was transported to Afghanistan, before being
moved again with Salah Qaru and Muhammad Bashmilah at the end
of April 2004.
For this flight, the men were taken individually from their
cells; black-masked guards put them in diapers, overalls, and
hoods. Their arms and legs were bound, with the chains being attached
to a belt around the waist in order to prevent any movement. Gags
and headphones were also used to prevent the prisoners speaking
among themselves or with the guards.
Based on the estimated transportation time by plane, helicopter
and car both on the way to their new prison camp and when leaving
there 13 months later to return to the Yemen, Amnesty assumes
the men were taken to a camp in Eastern Europe. Turkey, Bulgaria,
Romania, the Slovak Republic, Albania and Bosnia-Herzegovina are
considered possible states in which a secret prison could be based.
Other evidence cited by the three Yemenis also suggests they
were held in Eastern Europe.
There were big variations in temperature and the winters were
colder than any they had previously experienced. They described
their meals as typically European with pizza and sandwiches. The
labels on yoghurt cartons, cheese, water bottles and other food
had always been very carefully removed.
The sanitary facilities were modern and looked European, and
the toilets faced toward Mecca, which would probably indicate
they were not in a country with a Muslim majority. The prisoners
were given prayer schedules downloaded from the islamicfinder.org
Web site, which the men could see at the bottom of the printouts,
and were only allowed to pray at sunset. The variation in times
they were permitted to pray, taking into account daylight savings,
would indicate a location in one of the 46 member states of the
Council of Europe.
The three men were held in solitary confinement, without being
allowed any contact with fellow prisoners. Speaking to the website
Telepolis, Ferdinand Muggenthaler from the German
section of Amnesty provided further information about the
circumstances of internment in Eastern European secret prisons:
Their cells were bare, they were permanently exposed to
noise and had to live under artificial light, since they were
not permitted any exercise outside. The guards were always masked;
the only man they personally saw was the apparent director, who
told them of their release.
The security measures and monitoring systems make it improbable
that the camp was used for questioning unimportant
suspects. One of the men estimates that each week from his section
alone, 20 prisoners were led individually to take a shower. It
is not known how many sections comprised the camp as a whole.
Muhammad al-Assad, Salah Qaru and Muhammad Bashmilah were finally
transferred to the Yemeni authorities in May 2005, under instructions
by the US security forces that they be further incarcerated until
documentation was transferred from Washington.
The documents never arrived and the Yemeni authorities received
no information from the US about what charges the three men faced
nor why they should continue to be kept in prison.
After nine months, they were finally taken to court on the
fictitious charge of having falsified passports. They were sentenced
to two years imprisonment but were then released on account
of the 18 months they had spent in US internment camps and the
nine months in a Yemeni prison. The three were finally freed some
30 months after their initial detention. Nevertheless, they must
report to the local police station each day and are not allowed
to leave Aden.
Muhammad al-Assad lost his business in Tanzania and is now
deeply in debt, Salah Qaru and Muhammad Bashmilah have no possibility
of returning to their families in Indonesia. All three suffer
from psychological trauma due to their illegal imprisonment and
the torture they experienced.
Ferdinand Muggenthaler commented: In the case of the
three Yemeni men, the CIA obviously saw no more grounds for detaining
them. We must fear however that some people are being treated
even more badly.
The secret nature of the abductions and imprisonment under
the rendition programme means the real number of victims of this
practice can only be estimated with difficulty. There is neither
a formal indictment nor a report to any state authorities or to
the families about where the prisoners are. The victims do not
have any access to lawyers or other legal aid; they have literally
vanished from sight.
Amnesty estimates that the number of victims of renditions
amounts to at least several hundred. Last year, the Egyptian prime
minister admitted that various US services had brought some 60
to 70 prisoners to his country. Egypt is accused of routinely
torturing prisoners. One former CIA agent also reported that several
hundred prisoners had been flown by the US to secret prisons in
the Middle East. The actual number could be far higher, since
many victims remain disappeared to this day and their
families, fearing new reprisals, only rarely provide any information.
To be continued
See Also:
Britain: Government minister
admits US rendition planes landed in UK
[8 March 2006]
New York Times raises new
charges against German intelligence
[2 March 2006]
Document proves European
Union agreed to CIA rendition flights
[17 December 2005]
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