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Turkish Base Served as Staging Point for Launching CIA Renditions

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  • Turkish Base Served as Staging Point for Launching CIA Renditions

    PanARMENIAN.Net

    Turkish Military Base Served as Staging Point for Launching CIA Renditions
    09.06.2006 15:55 GMT+04:00

    /PanARMENIAN.Net/ The United States has progressively woven a
    clandestine `spider's web' of disappearances, secret detentions and
    unlawful inter-state transfers - spun with the collaboration or
    tolerance of Council of Europe member states, the Legal Affairs
    Committee of the Council of Europe Parliamentary Assembly (PACE) said
    today.

    In a draft resolution adopted at a meeting in Paris, based on a report
    by Dick Marty (Switzerland, ALDE), the committee said hundreds of
    persons had become entrapped in this web - in some cases when they
    were merely suspected of sympathizing with a presumed terrorist
    organization. The parliamentarians said this knowing collusion of
    member states took several different forms, including secretly
    detaining a person on European territory, capturing a person and
    handing them over to the US or permitting unlawful `renditions'
    through their airspace or across their territory. Among "staging
    points" for launching CIA renditions, Marty identified Adana-Incirlik
    in Turkey, and Baku, Azerbaijan.

    `It has now been demonstrated incontestably, by numerous
    well-documented and convergent facts, that secret detentions and
    unlawful inter-state transfers involving European countries have taken
    place, such as to require in-depth inquiries and urgent responses by
    the executive and legislative branches of all the countries
    concerned,' the committee said. The committee called on Council of
    Europe member states to review bilateral agreements signed with the
    United States, particularly those on the status of US forces stationed
    in Europe, to ensure they conformed fully to international human
    rights norms. The report is due for debate by the plenary Assembly -
    which brings together 630 parliamentarians from the 46 Council of
    Europe member states - in Strasbourg on 27 June 2006.

    For his part, Council of Europe Secretary General Terry Davis stated
    that Senator Marty has carried out a great deal of work under
    complicated conditions. `He has brought serious accusations as regards
    several European states. I would like to note that governments of some
    states have refuted the accusations immediately. However I consider
    that before refuting the governments had to clear up whether an
    investigation was carried out. I intend to prepare a number of
    proposals targeted at prevention of such violations of human rights in
    Europe.'
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