EU to probe CIA 'secret jails' claim

European Union human rights chiefs and the Red Cross are to investigate claims that the CIA set up secret jails in eastern Europe and elsewhere to interrogate al-Qaida suspects.

European Union human rights chiefs and the Red Cross are to investigate claims that the CIA set up secret jails in eastern Europe and elsewhere to interrogate al-Qaida suspects.

The allegations triggered a flurry of denials from governments in the former Soviet bloc and prompted Europe’s top human rights organisation and the Red Cross to investigate.

Such prisons, European officials say, would violate the continent’s human rights principles.

At work may be a complex web of global politics, in which eastern European countries face choices between the views of the European Union and their interest in close ties with the US.

According to a report in the Washington Post on Wednesday, the CIA has been hiding and interrogating some of its most important al-Qaida captives at Soviet-era compounds in eastern Europe.

The International Committee of the Red Cross, which has had exclusive rights to visit terror suspects detained at a US military base at Guantanamo, took strong interest in the claims – having long been concerned about reports that US officials were hiding detainees from ICRC delegates.

Red Cross chief spokeswoman Antonella Notari said the organisation had asked Washington about the allegations and requested access to the prisons if they existed.

Europe’s top human rights organisation, the Council of Europe, said it, too, would investigate.

Notari said the Red Cross, which also monitors conditions at US detention centres in Afghanistan and Iraq, has been unable to find some people who have reportedly been detained. She said the Red Cross was “concerned about the fate of an unknown number of persons detained as part of what is called the ‘global war on terror’ and held in undisclosed places of detention”.

Human Rights Watch in New York said yesterday it had evidence indicating the CIA transported suspected terrorists captured in Afghanistan to Poland and Romania. The conclusion was based on an analysis of flight logs of CIA aircraft from 2001 to 2004 obtained by the group, said Mark Garlasco, a senior military analyst with the organisation.

Human Rights Watch said it matched the flight patterns of the CIA aircraft with testimony from some of the hundreds of detainees in the war on terrorism who have been released by the US.

“The indications are that prisoners in Afghanistan are being (taken) to facilities in Europe and other countries in the world,” Garlasco, a former civilian intelligence officer with the Defence Intelligence Agency, said.

He would not say how the organisation obtained the flight logs, but noted that two destinations of the flights in particular stood out as likely sites of any secret CIA detention centres: Szymany airport in Poland, near the headquarters of Poland’s intelligence service; and Mihail Kogalniceanu military airfield in Romania.

The group also obtained the tail numbers of dozens of CIA aircraft to match them with the flight logs, Garlasco said.

On one of the flights, a Boeing 737 flew to Kabul, Afghanistan, in September 2003, from Washington via Ruzyne in the Czech Republic and Tashkent, Uzbekistan he said. On September 22, the plane flew to Szymany airport, then to Mihail Kogalniceanu, proceeded to Sale, Morocco and finally landed at the US Naval base in Guantanamo, Cuba, Garlasco said.

Romania is one of the countries that had an agreement with the US to use its airspace during the Afghanistan and Iraq wars and the US has used the Kogalniceanu air base in Romania. But the defence ministry issued a statement saying it was “not aware that such a detention centre … existed at the Mihail Kogalniceanu base” and invited journalists to come see for themselves.

“I repeat: We do not have CIA bases in Romania,” said Romanian prime minister Calin Popescu.

In Poland, an aide to President Aleksander Kwasniewski said authorities there had “no information” about such secret prisons.

Other European countries also issued denials.

Boglar Laszlo, a spokesman for Hungary’s prime minister, said an official report would be drawn up following consultations with air transportation officials and others “so we can bring this matter to a close”.

Baltic countries Lithuania, Estonia and Latvia also denied the allegations as did now-independent former Soviet republics such as Georgia and Armenia.

In London, the office of Prime Minister Tony Blair, who has close ties with the Bush administration, declined to comment.

EU spokesman Friso Roscam Abbing said the European Commission, the EU’s executive office, would launch an informal probe, requesting answers from all 25 member governments and EU candidates Romania, Bulgaria, Croatia and Turkey.

In Washington, the State Department said it had not received a request from the European Union for co-operation in a proposed investigation into reported CIA-run secret prisons in eastern Europe.

“If we do receive a request, we will take a look at it,” spokesman Sean McCormack said.

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