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BRUSSELS, Jan. 24 (Xinhuanet) -- European governments have silently condoned the
practice of abducting suspected terrorists and transporting them from European
airports to countries in which torture is used, according to an interim
report of the Council of Europe (CoE).
"It has been proved - and in fact never denied - that individuals have been abducted,
deprived of their liberty and transported ... in Europe, to be handed over
to countries in which they have suffered ... torture," a Swiss senator said
Tuesday at the CoE headquarters in Strasbourg, France.
Dick Marty, who is also the chief investigator in the CoE probeinto alleged
U.S. seizures of foreign prisoners and the existence of secret U.S. Central
Intelligence Agency (CIA) detention centersin Europe, is presenting his work to
the assembly of the Council of Europe.
"It is highly unlikely that European governments, or at least their
intelligence services, were unaware of the 'rendition' of more than a hundred
persons affecting Europe," he said.
Marty added there was "a great deal of coherent, convergent evidence
pointing to the existence of a system of 'relocation' or 'outsourcing' of
torture."
However, he also acknowledged that there was no formal, irrefutable
evidence at this stage of the existence of secret CIA detention centers in
Romania, Poland or any other country.
The Strasbourg-based CoE launched the probe last year after allegations
emerged about the secret CIA prisons.
Following a Washington Post report in November that the CIA used camps in
East European countries to interrogate terrorist suspects, the New York-based
Human Rights Watch named Romania and Poland as possible hosts of the US prisons.
Both Romania and Poland have denied the claims.
Washington has neither confirmed nor denied the allegations that the
prisons existed in Europe but has denied using or condoning torture.
EU Justice Commissioner Franco Frattini has said that EU memberstates and
candidate countries such as Romania could face sanctions if the allegations are
found to be true.
The European Parliament set up a temporary committee last week to
investigate CIA activities in European airspace and territory.
The 46-member committee will collect and analyze information totry to find
out whether the alleged prisons exist, if European citizens have been abducted
and whether European governments knew about them.
The committee plans to summon high-ranking politicians and national
intelligence officials for hearings in Brussels during spring.
But some EU legislators doubt the summoned parties will come to Brussels for
questioning, as the committee has no statutory power and cannot oblige anybody
to attend a hearing. Enditem |