http://www.alternet.org/rights/79273/sordid_details_on_'black_site'_at_diego_garcia_island_come_to_light/?page=entire
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    Sordid Details on 'Black Site' 
  at Diego Garcia Island Come to Light
   
  http://www.time.com/time/world/article/0,8599,1828469,00.html
   
   
    The U.S. military base on the island of Diego Garcia in the Indian Ocean.
   
  
http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/2007/10/22/guantanamos-ghosts-and-the-shame-of-diego-garcia/
   
  http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/images/diegogarcia.jpg
  
   
  http://www.andyworthington.co.uk/images/diegogarcia1960s.jpg
    
  Diego Garcia’s former residents in happier times.


   
  By Liliana Segura, AlterNet. Posted March 11, 2008.

    For years, America has been using a British island 
  as a landing pad for its torture taxis 
  -- only now has the U.K. admitted to it. 


   
  British Foreign Secretary David Miliband issued 
  an embarrassing apology to members of Parliament last month. 
   
  Despite "earlier explicit assurances" to the contrary, he admitted, 
  two planes carrying prisoners of the U.S. "war on terror" 
  had landed on the British-owned island of Diego Garcia in 2002 
  before flying to foreign territory as part of 
  the American extraordinary rendition program.
   
  One flight went on to Guantánamo, one to Morocco. 
  The identities of the detainees remain classified, but one of them 
  has since been set free. According to the CIA, neither was tortured. 
  But -- Miliband would have the public believe -- the CIA didn't bother 
  to tell the British government that its territory was being used 
  as a landing pad for American torture taxis.
   
  Human rights attorneys and a handful of British MPs 
  have long raised the possibility that Diego Garcia, a small island 
  in the Indian Ocean that is home to a massive American 
  military base, has played a role in extraordinary rendition 
  -- and that it is among the United States' "black sites" -
  - secret CIA-run prisons, the existence of which 
  President Bush himself confirmed in 2006. 
   
  Even loose-lipped American officials have acknowledged it. 
  As London-based human rights attorney Clive Stafford Smith, 
  director of the legal organization Reprieve (which, over a year ago, 
  unearthed flight logs recording the arrival and departure 
  of a CIA rendition plane at Diego Garcia), 
  wrote in the Guardian last January:
   
  British denials are difficult to square with the words of U.S. Army 
  Gen. Barry McCaffrey ... recently retired from running Southcom, 
  the military command that oversees Guantánamo. 
  He was asked in May 2004 where the thousands 
  of ghost prisoners were being held. 
  "You know, Bagram Air Field, Diego Garcia, Guantánamo, 
  16 camps throughout Iraq," he replied.
  
   
  Yet the Blair and Brown administrations continually denied it. 
  Until now.
  "We have just been informed by the United States of America 
  about what has actually happened," Prime Minister Gordon Brown 
  told reporters lamely on Feb. 21. "The U.S. has expressed regret 
  for us not knowing about this issue. We share the disappointment 
  that everybody has about what's actually happened."
   
  In the States, the controversy has gotten little press -
  - in no small part because Americans have known for years 
  that their elected officials are in the kidnap/torture business. 
  But in Britain, where the government has denied any role 
  in their ally's unsavory program, officials are pleading ignorance, 
  offering insipid excuses and, ultimately, trying to reduce proof 
  of their complicity with the U.S. torture/detention machinery 
  to a mere bureaucratic oversight. 
   
  As Brown tells it, this was simply a case where an "error in the earlier 
  U.S. records search meant that these cases did not come to light."
  Nevertheless, the Guardian reported on Monday, 
  "Ministers are coming under growing pressure as officials made it clear 
  they still could not be certain of the extent to which U.S. aircraft 
  made use of British facilities when taking alleged terrorists to prisons 
  where they were likely to be subjected to inhumane treatment."
   
  Regardless of what comes to light, the case of Diego Garcia 
  is uniquely instructive in what it has revealed of American and 
  British collusion in the past. Long before the "war on terror," 
  the story of Diego Garcia was a tragic symbol of imperial aggression.
   
  As the British journalist John Pilger wrote in his book 
  Freedom Next Time, 
  "The story of Diego Garcia is shocking, almost incredible."
   
  A British colony lying midway between Africa and Asia 
  in the Indian Ocean, the island is one of 64 unique coral islands 
  that form the Chagos Archipelago, a phenomenon of natural beauty 
  and once of peace. Newsreaders refer to it in passing: 
  "American B-52 and stealth bombers last night took off 
  from the uninhabited British island of Diego Garcia to bomb Iraq 
  (or Afghanistan)." 
   
  It is the word "uninhabited" that turns the key on the horror 
  of what was done there. In the 1970s, the Ministry of Defense 
  in London produced this epic lie: 
  "There is nothing in our files about a population and an evacuation."
  
   
  Pilger tells the awful story of an island that, at the height 
  of the Cold War, was seized by the British, and with the help 
  of the American government, "swept" and "sanitized." 
   
  This involved taking a population of natives and, retroactively, 
  reclassifying them as "short-term, temporary residents" 
  that were "returned" to the island of Mauritius, about 1,000 miles away. 
  "In fact," writes Pilger, "many islanders traced their ancestry 
  back five generations, as their cemeteries bore witness."
   
  Rendered disposable, the population of 2,000 was forcibly removed 
  and eventually replaced by American troops: 
  Diego Garcia was leased to the United States free of charge following 
  a secret pact between British Prime Minister Harold Wilson 
  and U.S. President Lyndon Johnson. 
  They inhabit a military base that's now one of the world's largest. 
  The name: "Camp Justice."
   
  Years later, the start of the "war on terror" coincided with
   a number of significant -- and hideously overdue -
  - developments for the people of Diego Garcia. In 2000, 
  the British high court ruled the forced removal of the islanders illegal. 
   
  But, reported Pilger, "within hours of the judgment, the Foreign Office 
  announced that it would not be possible for them to return 
  to Diego Garcia because of a 'treaty' with Washington -- in truth, 
  a deal concealed from Parliament and the U.S. Congress."
   
  In 2003, at the same time that extraordinary rendition flights 
  were carrying detainees to be tortured, a second ruling 
  denied compensation for the former residents of Diego Garcia. 
  Adding brutal insult to injury, the Blair government invoked the 
  "royal prerogative" -- special executive powers that belong 
  only to the king or queen -- to dispense with the earlier ruling -
  - and "a decree was issued that the islanders were banned forever 
  from returning home."
   
  Today, with Diego Garcia in the spotlight, official reports have tried 
  to continue the fiction that the island never belonged to anyone.
   "Once uninhabited, it was turned into an air base to protect 
  oil supplies to the West during the Cold War," 
  wrote a reporter in the Gulf Times the day after Miliband's apology.
   
  For their part, U.S. officials are taking responsibility for failing 
  to tell the British about the flights in and out of Diego Garcia. 
  "That we found this mistake ourselves, and that we brought it 
  to the attention of the British government, in no way changes 
  or excuses the reality that we were in the wrong," 
  CIA Director Michael Hayden said. 
   
  "An important part of intelligence work, inherently urgent, complex 
  and uncertain, is to take responsibility for errors and to learn from them."
  Perhaps. But if Diego Garcia's role in the war on terror is any indication, 
  neither the U.S. nor the British government have learned from their mistakes. 
  It is only the latest chapter in an epic story of imperial injustice.
   
  
   
  See more stories tagged with: 
  diego garcia, extraordinary rendition, british government, torture
   
  ==
  Liliana Segura is an AlterNet staff writer.
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  ============
  
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andy-worthington/secret-war-on-terror-pris_b_116471.html
  Secret "War on Terror" Prison on Diego Garcia Confirmed    stumble digg 
reddit del.ico.us news trust   
huffington_post:http://www.huffingtonpost.com/andy-worthington/secret-war-on-terror-pris_b_116471.html
  

    Posted August 1, 2008 | 06:47 PM (EST) 
   

  Read More: Abu Zubaydah, Barry McCaffrey, British Government, Cia, Diego 
Garcia, Gen. Michael Hayden, Ghost Prisoners, Guantanamo, Guantanamo Detainees, 
Hambali, Khalid Sheikh Mohammed, Mustafa Setmariam Nasar, Ramzi Bin Al-Shibh, 
Richard Clarke, Terrorism, Politics News 

       

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