-----Original Message-----
From: Mario Profaca <[EMAIL PROTECTED]>
To: [EMAIL PROTECTED]
Sent: Mon, 12 May 2008 7:15 am
Subject: [SPY NEWS] Pakistan: Revealed: torture centre linked to MI5










http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2008/may/12/terror.centre?gusrc=rss&feed=networkfront
Revealed: torture centre linked to MI5
    * Ian Cobain
    * guardian.co.uk,
    * Monday May 12 2008

This article was first published on guardian.co.uk on Monday May 12
2008. It was last updated at 13:35 on May 12 2008.
Aerial photograph of Rawalpindi

http://image.guim.co.uk/sys-images/Guardian/Pix/pictures/2008/05/12/rawalpindi460x276.jpg
An aerial photograph of Rawalpindi showing the interrogation centre.
Photograph: Getty Images

A secret interrogation centre in Pakistan where British terrorism
suspects are alleged to have been tortured after UK authorities had
them arrested has been found by the Guardian.

The centre, run by the country's Inter-Services Intelligence agency
(ISI), is in the Saddar district of Rawalpindi. It is surrounded by
high walls and watchtowers, and bristling with surveillance cameras.

So notorious is the ISI that local photographers are reluctant to take
pictures of the centre, although satellite images are readily available.

A British citizen says he was driven there in 2004, held for 10 months
and tortured. Salahuddin Amin, now aged 33, had moved to Pakistan
three years earlier from Luton, Bedfordshire.

Amin was eventually returned to the UK and successfully prosecuted.
His trial heard that he was interviewed by officers from the British
security service MI5 several times during his detention. His lawyers
allege ISI officers beat and whipped him, and threatened him with an
electric drill, in between the MI5 interviews, and that the British
officers must have known he was being mistreated.

A second British citizen, aged 33 and from Manchester, who was
arrested at the request of British authorities, is thought to have
been held at the same place. The man, who cannot be named for legal
reasons, has described being hooded and driven to a detention centre
that resembles Amin's account. He was deprived of sleep and whipped,
the man says, and an ISI officer used pliers to pull out three
fingernails from his left hand. He says he was then interviewed by two
British officials. His lawyers suspect they were from MI5.

Two other British citizens have said they were tortured by the ISI
before being questioned by British counter-terrorism officials.
Lawyers say there is evidence MI5 instigated the torture of British
citizens or, at very least, turned a blind eye to their mistreatment.
Last month, the Guardian disclosed how the allegations are to be aired
in forthcoming court cases, including a terrorism trial, a criminal
appeal and a civil action being pursued by one of the alleged victims.

MI5 declined to comment, but pointed to evidence given to the
all-party intelligence and security committee about training it gives
its agents regarding the possible mistreatment of detainees by foreign
intelligence agencies. Guidance for officers questioning detainees
held overseas states: "The security and intelligence agencies do not
participate in, solicit, encourage or condone the use of torture or
inhuman and degrading treatment."

Amin says he was one of several prisoners kept in an underground block
of 10 small cells, each with a mattress and a pillow. The torture, he
says, took place nearby in a carpeted room with bright overhead
lights, a table, several chairs and a small wooden stool where
prisoners were expected to sit. In one corner of the room was a
camera. He says that sometimes he would be hooded and driven for 20
minutes to meet two MI5 officers; on other occasions they would
question him in the room where he had been tortured.

Among other people thought to have been tortured at the Rawalpindi
centre is an innocent taxi driver who was caught up in the
investigation of Amin. Ezaj Rabanni, 38, was interrogated for several
days about the whereabouts of Amin, who had been his passenger several
times and whom the ISI had been unable to locate.

"They beat me for half an hour or so on the first day and they whipped
me with a leather belt," Rabanni said in a statement taken before Amin
was tried at the Old Bailey. "I couldn't see them because I had a hood
over my head the whole time. They kept asking me about Salahuddin,
asking me where he was. They beat me the second day and the third day.
I couldn't protect myself - my hands were shackled behind my back the
whole time.

"Then I heard the sound of an electric drill being switched on. I
could feel the drill touching my side and my clothes being wrapped
around it. I have never been so frightened in my life."

Rabanni gave evidence at the Old Bailey trial that ended with Amin and
four other men being jailed for life for conspiring to cause
explosions in the UK. The taxi driver now says he is too terrified to
return to Pakistan, because he fears he may be arrested and tortured
again because of what he said in court. He has applied for asylum and
is living in Stockton-on-Tees, Cleveland.

Questions are likely to be asked about the role of the Foreign Office,
as consular officials tried to visit only two of the detainees. The
men's lawyers say consular officials must also have been aware of the
detention of each of them, and known there was a strong possibility
they were being tortured.

Asked about this failure, the Foreign Office said it could not act for
British citizens of joint British-Pakistani nationality, as the
authorities in Islamabad regarded them as being only Pakistani.

However, the Foreign Office does act on behalf of the more than 200
young people of dual nationality forced into marriage in Pakistan each
year. It has five people working full-time on such cases.

Ali Dayan Hasan, the south Asia researcher for Human Rights Watch,
said: "I find it worrying that the British high commission has sought
refuge behind the dual citizenship clause when it knows that the
detainee's life may be in danger and that the detention is illegal
under Pakistani, British and international law."

The Foreign Office would not say how many British citizens have been
detained in Pakistan in the last decade and questioned over alleged
terrorism. Nor would it disclose how many had subsequently complained
of mistreatment, saying: "We have a duty to respect the privacy of the
individuals concerned."

Asked how many complaints of mistreatment had led to investigations by
British authorities, the Foreign Office replied: "None. The British
authorities are not able directly to investigate the conditions in
Pakistani institutions."




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