Group Says U.S. Sent Up to 150 to Possible Torture Sites
Human Rights Watch also criticizes the military's
investigations of
the way it treats foreign detainees.
By Richard A. Serrano
Times Staff Writer
April 24, 2005
WASHINGTON — A civil liberties group investigating allegations of
prisoner abuse will report today that since the Sept. 11 attacks, U.S.
agents have secretly transported up to 150 detainees to countries that
may practice torture.
Such transporting, known as rendition, is more widespread than the
government has reported, according to Human Rights Watch. In a report
issued a year after the earliest revelations of the Abu Ghraib prison
abuse scandal, the group said the renditions, along with abuses of
foreign detainees by U.S. forces, were possible violations of
international law.
The group also said an Army investigation
clearing top U.S. military commanders of wrongdoing in the scandal at
Abu Ghraib in Baghdad established the need for an outside inquiry.
"This just proves the military can't investigate itself," said Reed
Brody, a lawyer for Human Rights Watch, which monitors civil rights
issues around the world. "It seems like another in a long line of
attempts at self-absolution."
Brody's organization and the
American Civil Liberties Union are among the groups that have sought
the appointment of a special counsel to investigate U.S. detention
practices since a string of Pentagon inquiries found few cases of
wrongdoing, especially in higher military ranks or among civilian
officials.
Revelations on Friday that an upcoming report by
the Army inspector general would exonerate Lt. Gen. Ricardo Sanchez,
the former chief U.S. commander in Iraq, and three other top officers
proves the inadequacy of the military's probes, the rights groups said.
"These findings only show that the president must appoint a special
counsel — who is not beholden by rank or party and who is able to look
up the military chain of command," said ACLU Executive Director Anthony
D. Romero in a statement Saturday.
The Human Rights Watch
report comes amid growing concern on Capitol Hill over sending
prisoners to countries such as Syria and Egypt, which are widely
believed to torture prisoners for interrogation purposes.
The
Bush administration has acknowledged that renditions have occurred, but
officials at the CIA and elsewhere have not definitively said how many
captives may have been detained by the United States in one country,
then clandestinely flown to a third nation.
Former CIA Director
George J. Tenet has said his agency took part in more than 70
renditions before Sept. 11, but he has not made clear whether any
involved sending detainees to countries that permitted torture.
His successor, CIA Director Porter J. Goss, testified in February
before the Senate Intelligence Committee that experts did not believe
prisoner abuse was an effective way to get information.
According to Goss, when prisoners are transferred, the U.S. "seeks
assurances" that they will not be mistreated.
Last week, Sen. John D. Rockefeller IV (D-W. Va.), vice chairman of the
Senate Intelligence Committee, urged a separate congressional review of
how the CIA detained and interrogated prisoners.
Human Rights
Watch said its determination that there were 100 to 150 renditions was
based on its own investigative work and media reports from around the
world.
The organization cited some examples as part of the release of today's
report:
• Maher Arar, a Syrian-born Canadian, was picked up by U.S.
authorities at a New York airport, flown to Jordan and driven to Syria,
the group said. After being released 10 months later, he described
"repeated torture, often with cables and electrical cords, during his
confinement in a Syrian prison."
• Swedish officials turned
over two Egyptians, Ahmed Agiza and Mohammed al-Zari, to U.S.
officials. The men were allegedly hooded, shackled and drugged, placed
aboard a U.S. government-leased plane and flown to Egypt. "The two men
were reportedly tortured, including in Cairo's notorious Tora prison,"
Human Rights Watch said.
• Osama Moustafa Nasr of Milan,
Italy, has complained that Americans seized him and flew him to Egypt.
There, he has said, the secret police beat him so badly that he lost
hearing in one ear.
The organization said it did not know how
many other cases there might be or what had happened to most of the
other detainees "rendered" to other countries.
"These are the only ones we can document," Brody said.