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PACE Rapporteur Exposes Global 'Spider's Web' Of CIA Secret Jails

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  • PACE Rapporteur Exposes Global 'Spider's Web' Of CIA Secret Jails

    PACE RAPPORTEUR EXPOSES GLOBAL 'SPIDER'S WEB' OF CIA SECRET JAILS

    PanARMENIAN.Net
    07.06.2006 18:14 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly rapporteur
    Dick Marty today revealed what he called a global "spider's web"
    of CIA detentions and transfers and listed seven Council of Europe
    member states who could be held responsible, in varying degrees, for
    violations of the rights of named individuals by colluding in these
    operations. In a 67-page explanatory memorandum to his report, made
    public in Paris today at a meeting of the Assembly's Legal Affairs
    Committee, he said there were corroborated facts strengthening the
    presumption that landing points in Romania and Poland were detainee
    drop-off points near to secret detention centers.

    "Even if proof, in the classical meaning of the term, is not as yet
    available, a number of coherent and converging elements indicate that
    such secret detention centers did indeed exist in Europe." These
    elements warranted further investigation, he said. "It is now
    clear... that authorities in several European countries actively
    participated with the CIA in these unlawful activities. Other countries
    ignored them knowingly, or did not want to know," he said.

    Mr Marty said he used evidence from national and international air
    traffic control authorities, as well as sources inside intelligence
    services, including in the United States, to compile a detailed
    picture of a global system of secret detentions and unlawful
    transfers - including new analysis revealing what he called "rendition
    circuits". He listed seven Council of Europe member states who could
    be held responsible, in varying degrees, which are not always settled
    definitively, for violations of the rights of specific individuals:
    Sweden, Bosnia and Herzegovina, the United Kingdom, Italy, "the
    former Yugoslav Republic of Macedonia", Germany and Turkey. Several
    more colluded, actively or passively, in the detention or transfer
    of unknown persons, he said, reported the PACE Communication Unit.
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