Questions Arise Over US Base in Kosovo 

Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  Conditions at the US 
Bondsteel camp in Kosovo were in doubt 

While US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice secured a reprieve from European 
governments over the treatment of detainees, the suspicion of systematical 
abuse grows after reports of a Guantanamo-like base in Kosovo.

The UN ombudsman in Kosovo has said that the US Bondsteel military base in the 
province holds a prison that brings to mind the one in Guantanamo Bay, a German 
daily reported on Friday.

 

"There can be no doubt that for years there has been a prison in the Bondsteel 
base with no external civilian or judicial oversight," Marek Antoni Nowicki 
told Berliner Zeitung. "The prison looks like the pictures we have seen of 
Guantanamo Bay."

 


Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  Prisoners 
at the US military base in Guantanamo Bay on the island of Cuba
Nowicki said he visited Bondsteel, in the east of Kosovo, in late 2000 and 
early 2001 when it served as the main detention center for KFOR, the NATO-led 
force that is responsible for peace and security in Kosovo. The Polish jurist 
who has been the UN ombudsman in Kosovo for the past six years said he has had 
no access to Bondsteel, where some 6,000 US soldiers are based, since 2001.

 

His statement comes amid a growing controversy over allegations that the United 
States intelligence services were flying terrorism suspects through European 
countries to take them to secret CIA prisons -- also suspected to be in eastern 
Europe -- where they were tortured. 

 

US military denies shocking conditions in camp

 

The report backs up a statement by Council of Europe human rights commissioner 
Alvaro Gil-Robles in November that the US military ran a Guantanamo-type 
detention centre in Camp Bondsteel.

 

Gil-Robles told the French daily Le Monde he had been "shocked" by conditions 
at the center, which he witnessed in 2002. The camp resembled "a smaller 
version of Guantanamo", he said, referring to the US prison in Cuba, where 
hundreds of terror suspects are detained without trial.

 

Gil-Robles' claims were vigorously denied by the US military in Kosovo.

 


Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  NATO 
bombings on Belgrade put an end to hostilities in the decaying Yugoslavian 
nation
The breakaway Serbian province came under UN and NATO control in June 1999 
after NATO's 11-week bombing campaign ended a brutal crackdown by Serb forces 
of ethnic Albanian rebels.

 

During a 4-nation tour of Europe this week, US Secretary of State Condoleezza 
Rice said that her country "does not condone torture," but sidestepped 
questions on the existence of a network of secret CIA prisons.

 

Red Cross pushing for prisoner access

 

While governments in Europe accepted Rice on her word and took a more 
wait-and-see attitude, the Red Cross increased the pressure on the United 
States to be given more access to prisoners held in secret jails.

 


Bildunterschrift: Großansicht des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  The Red 
Cross' presence in Iraq has been full with danger
"We have said that undisclosed detention is a major concern for us, Jakob 
Kellenberger, president of the International Red Cross, told a news conference. 
"We are already visiting very many detainees under US authorities in 
Guantanamo, Iraq and Afghanistan … with the aim of getting access to all people 
detained in the framework of the so-called war on terror."

 

John Bellinger, the US State Department's legal adviser, acknowledged to 
reporters in Geneva on Thursday that the ICRC does not have access to all 
detainees held by US forces, but refused to discuss alleged secret detention 
centers.

 

The Red Cross has been pressing the administration of US President George W. 
Bush for two years for information about and access to what the agency calls 
"an unknown number of people captured as part of the so-called global war on 
terror and held in undisclosed locations."


 
DW staff / AFP (jdk) 
http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,1810615,00.html?maca=en-rss_english_top-388-rdf


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