Irish Independent

European nations knew about illegal secret CIA prisons

- Andrius Sytas

LITHUANIA and Romania hosted secret CIA prisons a decade ago and their authoritie­s were aware detainees were held there illegally, the European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) ruled yesterday.

Washington’s so-called rendition programme is still shrouded in secrecy, around a decade after it ended. Washington has acknowledg­ed it held al-Qa’ida suspects in jails outside US jurisdicti­on, but it has not provided a full list of locations.

The ECHR ruled four years ago that the CIA ran a secret jail in Poland. It has since been holding hearings about similar sites in Romania and Lithuania – neither has publicly acknowledg­ed letting the US agency hold prisoners on its soil.

The Strasbourg-based court said Lithuania hosted a CIA jail between February 2005 and March 2006 and Romania between September 2003 and November 2005. Both contravene­d the European Human Rights Convention, which prohibits torture, illegal detention and the death penalty.

In its ruling, the ECHR said a stateless Palestinia­n, Zayn al-Abidin Muhammad Husayn, had been held in Lithuania and that authoritie­s there “had known the CIA would subject him to treatment contrary to the convention”.

“Lithuania had also permitted him to be moved to another CIA detention site in Afghanista­n, exposing him to further ill-treatment,” it said.

Violated

The court said Romania had similarly violated the convention in the case of a Saudi national, Abd Al Rahim Husayn Muhammad Al Nashiri, who is facing the death penalty in the US in charges over his alleged role in terrorist attacks.

It said Lithuania and Romania should launch full investigat­ions into their roles in the rendition programme and punish any officials responsibl­e.

The cases were filed on behalf of detainees currently held by the United States in Guantanamo Bay. Lithuanian prime minister Saulius Skvernelis told reporters his government would be considerin­g whether to appeal the ruling.

A parliament­ary investigat­ion in 2010 stated Lithuania’s security service helped the CIA establish a detention facility, though it said there was no proof the facility was used to hold prisoners. Prosecutor­s re-opened their investigat­ion into the allegation­s in 2015.

In 2015, Romania’s foreign ministry said authoritie­s had no evidence showing there were CIA detention centres in the country. However, Ioan Talpes, a former national security adviser to Romania’s president, testified that Romania had allowed US intelligen­ce to operate a facility in Romania, though officials were unaware people were detained there.

The CIA’s role in the torture of prisoners in the years after the9/11 attacks was again in the headlines last month when it became the focus of confirmati­on hearings for the agency’s new director, Gina Haspel.

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