http://www.allgov.com/news/top-stories/these-54-governments-secretly-supported-the-cias-kidnap-and-torture-program-130207?news=846996

These 54 Governments Secretly Supported the CIA’s Kidnap-and-Torture Program
Thursday, February 07, 2013

The United States’ extreme reaction to the September 11, 2001, terrorist
attacks was shared by many of the world’s governments, with more than a
quarter of them supporting the Central Intelligence
Agency<http://www.allgov.com/departments/independent-agencies/central-intelligence-agency-cia?agencyid=7293>’s
(CIA) extraordinary rendition program either because they believed in it or
because they just wanted to stay on the good side of the United States
government.



Rendition is the practice of bypassing due process to seize a suspect in a
foreign country and transport him to another country where there is a
warrant for his arrest.  Extraordinary rendition is the practice of seizing
a suspect and transporting him to another country for interrogation, even
though he is not wanted for a crime.



A new 
report<http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/sites/default/files/globalizing-torture-20120205.pdf>
from
the Open Society Justice
Initiative<http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/about/programs/open-society-justice-initiative>
(OSJI),
a New York-based human rights organization, claims that at least 54
countries co-operated with the CIA’s kidnapping, detaining and torturing
operation.



OSJI noted that the administration of President George W. Bush was
responsible “for authorizing human rights violations associated with secret
detention and extraordinary rendition, and the impunity that they have
enjoyed to date remains a matter of significant concern.”



However, the human rights group also emphasized that the rendition program
“could not have been implemented without the active participation of
foreign governments. These governments too must be held accountable.”



Here are the 54 nations that aided the CIA:



   1. Afghanistan—hosted at least three CIA prisons where suspects were
   tortured and abused.
   2. Albania—allowed its military airbase to be used to receive Khaled
   
El-Masri<http://www.allgov.com/news/us-and-the-world/human-rights-court-concludes-that-cia-tortured-and-sodomized-an-innocent-german-121216?news=846494>,
   a German car salesman whom the CIA kidnapped after mistaking him for
   someone else and then released into Albania.
   3. Algeria—permitted the use of its airports for CIA kidnapping
   operations and probably received at least one victim from CIA custody.
   4. Australia—implicated in the kidnapping of Australian citizen Mamdouh
   Habib, who was taken to Egypt and tortured. He was later transferred to
   Guantánamo, before being released without charge three years later.
   5. Austria—permitted the use of its airspace for CIA kidnapping flights
   and may have cooperated in the abduction of two Austrian residents.
   6. Azerbaijan—permitted the use of its airports for CIA flights and
   arrested a Saudi citizen, Ahmed Muhammed al-Darbi, who is currently
   incarcerated at Guantánamo.
   7. Belgium—allowed the use of its airports for CIA kidnapping flights,
   including one that transported Canadian Maher Arar, who was taken to Syria
   to be tortured.
   8. Bosnia-Herzegovina—allowed the United States to use two military
   bases to house prisoners. It is not clear whether they were run by the CIA
   or the Department of Defense.
   9. Canada—provided incorrect information about Canadian citizen Maher
   Arar that led to his seizure at JFK Airport in New York City and subsequent
   torture in Syria. He was later returned to Canada. The CIA extraordinary
   rendition program also made 74 flights to Canada.
   10. Croatia—allowed its airports to be used for CIA kidnapping flights.
   11. Cyprus—allowed its airports to be used 57 times by the CIA, included
   for flights that held prisoners.
   12. Czech Republic—allowed its airports to be used for CIA flights.
   13. Denmark—allowed CIA planes involved in the extraordinary rendition
   program to stop at Danish airports 45 times.
   14. Djibouti—allowed the United States to use a military base, Camp
   Lemonnier, in its territory, to hold and secretly interrogate detainees.
   15. Egypt—was the most popular destination for suspects who have been
   seized by U.S. authorities going back to the administration of President
   Bill Clinton. Dozens of prisoners were sent by the U.S. to be interrogated,
   imprisoned and tortured by the regime of Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak.
   16. Ethiopia—hosted the detention and interrogation of at least three
   prisoners, at least one of whom, Ali Isse, was tortured with electric
   shocks by Ethiopian interrogators.
   17. Finland—allowed its airports to be used by 150 flights associated
   with the CIA kidnapping and interrogation program
   18. Gambia—at the request of the CIA, captured, detained and
   interrogated three suspects, two of whom were then sent to Guantánamo.
   19. Georgia—under pressure from the United States, captured and suspects
   and turned them over to the CIA.
   20. Germany—participated in the interrogation of Muhammad Zammar while
   he was in custody in Syria, Abdel Halim Khafagy while he was in Bosnia, and
   Murat Kurnaz at Guantánamo. CIA-operated aircraft also made about 336
   stopovers in Germany.
   21. Greece—allowed its airports to be used by CIA-operated aircraft 64
   times, including for the transfer of eight suspects who had been seized by
   the U.S.
   22. Hong Kong—captured, detained and interrogated Libyan citizen Sami
   al-Saadi (Abu Munthir) before transferring him and his family to Muammar
   Gaddafi’s Libya.
   23. Iceland—allowed its airports to be used more than 67 times by CIA
   planes.
   24. Indonesia—at the request of the CIA, arrested two suspects and sent
   them to Egypt and Jordan to be tortured. A third suspect, Omar al-Faruq,
   was also arrested and turned over to the CIA.
   25. Iran—as part of a detainee exchange deal, turned over fifteen
   individuals to the government of Afghanistan, at least six of whom were
   imprisoned secretly by the CIA.
   26. Ireland—allowed its airports to be used 147 times by CIA-operated
   aircraft, including flights that were used for the transfer of kidnapped
   suspects.
   27. Italy—allowed its airports to be used 46 times by CIA-operated
   flights. Italian intelligence officers participated in the CIA abduction of
   Abu Omar, who was sent to Egypt to be tortured. In connection with this
   case, in November 2009, Italy became the only nation in the world to hand
   down human rights convictions relating to the CIA’s secret detention and
   extraordinary rendition program. In September 2012, Italy’s highest
court upheld
   the 
convictions<http://www.allgov.com/news/us-and-the-world/italys-highest-court-upholds-cia-kidnapping-convictions-120921?news=845373>
of
   22 CIA agents, one U.S. Air Force officer and two Italian intelligence
   agents.
   28. Jordan—interrogated and severely tortured at least 15 prisoners who
   were handed over by the CIA. Also captured one suspect for the CIA and held
   others in transit on behalf of the CIA.
   29. Kenya—arrested and handed over to the CIA two suspects, one of whom
   was beaten by Kenyan police being the handover.
   30. Libya—detained, interrogated and tortured at least eleven prisoners
   who were delivered to the Muammar Gaddafi regime by the CIA. Anti-Gaddafi
   dissident Abu Abdullah al-Sadiq (also known as Abdul Hakim Belhadj) was
   seized in Bangkok and tortured by CIA officials before being sent to Libya,
   where he was interrogated by British agents. He later served as a military
   leader of the rebel forces who overthrew Gaddafi.
   31. Lithuania—hosted a secret CIA prison for “high-value detainees.”
   32. Macedonia—captured, interrogated and abused German citizen Khaled
   
El-Masri<http://www.allgov.com/news/us-and-the-world/human-rights-court-concludes-that-cia-tortured-and-sodomized-an-innocent-german-121216?news=846494>
before
   turning him over to the CIA. It was later determined was that El-Masri’s
   case was one of mistaken identity.
   33. Malawi—cooperated in the CIA capture, detention and abuse of six
   individuals, five of whom were later released in Sudan when it was
   determined that there was no evidence linking them to Al-Qaeda.
   34. Malaysia—cooperated with the CIA in the detention of a Libyan
   couple, Abu Abdullah al-Sadiq (Abdul Hakim Belhadj) and Fatima Bouchar, who
   were sent on to Gaddafi’s Libya.
   35. Mauritania—captured and interrogated at least three individuals
   before turning them over to the CIA.
   36. Morocco—allowed the CIA to build a prison to hold Al-Qaeda suspects
   and also held them in another facility. The CIA also turned over suspects
   to be tortured by Moroccan authorities, including, in a particularly
   notorious case, Binyam Mohamed, whose Moroccan interrogators broke his
   bones while beating him, sliced his genitals, and poured hot liquid onto
   his penis while cutting it. Mohamed later spent five years at Guantánamo
   before being released.
   37.  Pakistan—operated a secret prison in cooperation with the United
   States. Pakistani dictator Pervez Musharraf admitted to handing over 369
   suspects to U.S. representatives, most of whom were transported to secret
   facilities in Afghanistan and/or to Guantánamo. Pakistan’s Inter-Services
   Intelligence (ISI) also participated in the capture, interrogation and
   torture of suspects who were then transferred to the CIA.
   38. Poland—hosted a secret CIA prison. It was in Poland that Khalid
   Sheikh Mohammed, who claims to have organized the 9/11 attacks on the World
   Trade Center and the Pentagon, was waterboarded 183 times.
   39. Portugal—allowed its airports to be used for 91 stopovers as part of
   the CIA’s extraordinary rendition program.
   40. Romania—hosted a secret CIA prison and permitted the use of its
   airports as part of the CIA program.
   41. Saudi Arabia—imprisoned individuals before and after they were
   kidnapped or detained by the CIA.
   42. Somalia—provided territory and guards for individuals detained by
   the CIA. The CIA also hired Somali warlords to kidnap suspected militants.
   Up to seventeen such suspects were seized in Mogadishu alone, although most
   of them turned out to be innocent.
   43. South Africa—although the details are murky, appears to have allowed
   the U.S. to operate freely in the country in order to capture Saud Menon, a
   Pakistani wanted in connection with the murder of U.S. journalist Daniel
   Pearl.
   44. Spain—permitted its airports to be used as “staging points” for
   flights involving the illegal transfer of suspects.
   45. Sri Lanka—allowed at least one CIA flight to land, probably in
   connection with the capture of Riduan Isamuddin (Hambali), who was known as
   “the Osama bin Laden of Southeast Asia.”
   46. Sweden—allowed CIA operatives to seize two Egyptians asylum seekers,
   Ahmed Agiza and Muhammed al-Zery, who were then sent to Egypt, where they
   were tortured.
   47. Syria—served as a popular destination to which the CIA sent suspects
   to be interrogated and tortured.
   48. Thailand—hosted a secret CIA prison were detainees were tortured and
   allowed its airports to be used for extraordinary rendition flights.
   49. Turkey—captured Nashwan abd al-Razzaq abd al-Baqi (Abd
   al-Hadial-Iraqi, an Iraqi citizen accused of being an Al-Qaeda leader in
   Afghanistan, and turning him over to the CIA.
   50. United Arab Emirates—captured and tortured individuals before
   turning them over to the CIA.
   51. United Kingdom—assisted in the kidnapping of suspects, shared
   intelligence with the CIA, participated in the secret interrogation of
   suspects and allowed about its airports to be used about 170 times for
   CIA-operated flights. Glasgow’s Prestwick airport was known as a crucial
   “staging point” in the CIA extraordinary rendition operation.
   52. Uzbekistan—known for gruesome methods of torture, received prisoners
   from the CIA to be interrogated.
   53. Yemen—at the request of the United States, detained individuals who
   had been kidnapped by the CIA.
   54. Zimbabwe—detained kidnapped suspects in transit to centers in other
   countries.

-David Wallechinsky



*To Learn More:*

Globalizing Torture: CIA Secret Detention and Extraordinary
Rendition<http://www.opensocietyfoundations.org/sites/default/files/globalizing-torture-20120205.pdf>
(Open
Society Justice Initiative) (pdf)

CIA Rendition: More Than a Quarter of Countries 'Offered Covert
Support'<http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2013/feb/05/cia-rendition-countries-covert-support>
(by
Ian Cobain, The Guardian)

More Than 50 Countries Helped the CIA Outsource
Torture<http://www.wired.com/dangerroom/2013/02/54-countries-rendition/>
(by
Spencer Ackerman, Wired)

Human Rights Court Concludes that CIA Tortured and Sodomized an Innocent
German<http://www.allgov.com/news/us-and-the-world/human-rights-court-concludes-that-cia-tortured-and-sodomized-an-innocent-german-121216?news=846494>
(by
Noel Brinkerhoff, AllGov)

Italy’s Highest Court Upholds CIA Kidnapping
Convictions<http://www.allgov.com/news/us-and-the-world/italys-highest-court-upholds-cia-kidnapping-convictions-120921?news=845373>
(by
Noel Brinkerhoff and David Wallechinsky, AllGov)

Billing Dispute Opens Unexpected Window on Secret CIA Kidnapping
Flights<http://www.allgov.com/news/controversies/billing-dispute-opens-unexpected-window-on-secret-cia-kidnapping-flights?news=843213>
(by
Noel Brinkerhoff and David Wallechinsky, AllGov)


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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