. 24/7 Space News .
Europe Shocked By CIA Prison Camp Claims

Allegations that some al-Qaida prisoners captured in Iraq and elsewhere are being taken to secret prisons in Eastern Europe has sparked a huge debate across Europe.

Brussels (UPI) Nov 03, 2005
Allegations that the Central Intelligence Agency is running prison camps for suspected al-Qaida terrorists in Eastern Europe have sparked howls of protest from EU legislators and human rights groups, but strenuous denials from politicians in Poland -- one of the countries said to host the secret jails.

Human Rights Watch Thursday released fresh information they say indicates Poland, an EU member state, and Romania -- which is expected to join the bloc in 2007 -- both have, or had, CIA prisons on their territories. Vanessa Saenen, a spokeswoman for the advocacy group in Brussels, said flight records showed a CIA-commissioned Boeing 737 made frequent stops between Afghanistan, Iraq and the two former communist countries after 2002.

On Sept. 22, 2003, flight records obtained by Human Rights Watch showed that a plane from the Afghan capital Kabul touched down in Szymany, a military airport in northeast Poland. The following day, the same plane -- with the registration number N313P -- landed in Mihail Kojalniceanu military airport in Romania. Both airports are closed to the public and press, although U.S. Secretary of State Donald Rumsfeld made a courtesy call to the latter base in Oct. 2004, according to the lobby group.

The claims have been corroborated by a Washington Post story Wednesday that revealed details of eight "black sites" -- as the covert prisons are referred to in classified White House, CIA and Justice Department documents -- in South Asia, the Middle East and Eastern Europe. They have also been given credence by Czech Interior Minister Frantiszek Bublan, who told the aktualne.cz news agency that the U.S. administration approached Prague to build a camp, but the request was turned down by the Czechs.

"What is happening in these camps is illegal," said Saenen."You cannot just arrest people without trail, transport them halfway across the globe and not give them access to a lawyer. Even terrorist suspects are guaranteed basic rights -- such as the right not to be tortured."

Members of the European Parliament, who have been highly critical of incidents of abuse of prisoners in Iraq, Afghanistan and Guantanamo Bay by U.S. troops, are also up in arms about the charges. "It is deeply disturbing that European countries are involved in acts that are illegal under international law and the European Convention on Human Rights," said Claude Moraes, a British legislator from Prime Minister Tony Blair's governing Labor Party. Calling on the U.K. presidency of the European Union to look into the claims, Moraes said: "No EU member state should be let off the hook when the club's moral code is breached and when there is prima facie of malpractice occurring."

The United States government has refused to confirm or deny the allegations. Officials in Poland -- one of Washington's staunchest allies in Europe -- are adamant there are no U.S. 'gulags' on their territory.

"It is extremely unlikely," Janusz Onyszkiewicz, an EU legislator and former defense minister, told United Press International. "I don't think our cooperation with the United States goes that far. Besides, these kind of goings-on would have been spotted and leaked to the press by now." The European Commission waded into the rapidly escalating transatlantic row Thursday, pledging to investigate the allegations. "I don't think we have such things as secret prisons in the European Union, fortunately," spokesman Friso Roscam Abbing told reporters. Pressed on whether the existence of such camps would contravene EU law, Roscam Abbing added: "As far as the treatment of prisoners is concerned ... it is clear that all 25 member states, having signed up to European Convention on Human Rights and to the International Convention Against Torture, are due to respect and fully implement the obligations deriving from those treaties."

Related Links
SpaceDaily
Search SpaceDaily
Subscribe To SpaceDaily Express



Memory Foam Mattress Review
Newsletters :: SpaceDaily :: SpaceWar :: TerraDaily :: Energy Daily
XML Feeds :: Space News :: Earth News :: War News :: Solar Energy News


Analysis: Critics Condemn UK Terror Bill
London (UPI) Nov 03, 2005
The British government is facing a battle to get its controversial anti-terror proposals passed into law, as critics queue up to condemn the measures they argue will fuel the very extremism they are designed to combat.







  • Sandia Enters Into Agreement With The Aerospace Corporation
  • Russia, China Could Create Spacecraft To Explore Mars, The Moon
  • Energiya Corporation Suggests Using New Kliper Spaceship
  • GAO: NASA Still Has Accounting Problems

  • Mars Express PFS Spectrometer Back At Work
  • A Dusty Weekend For Opportunity
  • Riding Ripples And Working Issues
  • Methane Found In Desert Soils Bolsters Theories That Life Could Exist On Mars

  • Sea Launch Initiates Countdown For Inmarsat-4 Launch
  • Kazakhstan Will Not Lower Rent For Baikonur Space Center
  • Russian Rocket Launch With U.S. Satellite Set For December 1
  • SSETI Express - One Day To Launch

  • L-3 Comm And QinetiQ Sign MoU For ISTAR And ISR Program Collaboration
  • India To Launch Exclusive Satellite To Track Natural Disasters
  • Rensselaer Researcher Awarded DARPA Funding To Improve Terrain Maps
  • Boeing Awarded National Geospatial-Intelligence Agency Security Data Contracts

  • Astronomers Announce Discovery Of Two New Moons Of Pluto
  • NASA Says Pluto May Have Three Moons Instead Of One
  • Hubble Spots Possible New Moons Around Pluto
  • New Horizons Pluto Payload Ready For Flight, Exciting Science Campaign

  • Black Widow Nebula Hiding In The Dust
  • Astronomers Get Closest Look Yet At Milky Way's Mysterious Core
  • One Of The Most Massive Stars In Our Galaxy Has A Hot Partner
  • A SWIRE Picture Is Worth Billions Of Years

  • Energia To Build Site For Moon Flights - Corporation President
  • NASA Internet Software Zooms To Moon Images In 3-D
  • NASA'S Hubble Looks For Possible Moon Resources
  • Ball State Students Developing Model Of Edible Lunar Vehicle

  • Garmin Taps XM NavTraffic Powered By NAVTEQ Traffic For Real-Time Data
  • Harris Corporation Awarded Contract For Joint Direct Attack Munition Anti-Jam GPS Electronics
  • First Galileo Satellite To Be Presented At ESA/ESTEC
  • Winner Of DARPA Robotic Vehicle Race Has NovAtel GPS Onboard

  • The content herein, unless otherwise known to be public domain, are Copyright 1995-2006 - SpaceDaily.AFP and UPI Wire Stories are copyright Agence France-Presse and United Press International. ESA PortalReports are copyright European Space Agency. All NASA sourced material is public domain. Additionalcopyrights may apply in whole or part to other bona fide parties. Advertising does not imply endorsement,agreement or approval of any opinions, statements or information provided by SpaceDaily on any Web page published or hosted by SpaceDaily. Privacy Statement