Yorkshire Post

UK& ABROAD Prosecutio­n call over CIA torture

- CHARLES BROWN NEWS REPORTER Email: YP.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

A TOP United Nations investigat­or is calling for the prosecutio­n of senior US officials who authorised and carried out torture.

Ben Emmerson, the UN’s special rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights, said all CIA and other US government officials who carried out waterboard­ing and other torture must also be prosecuted.

A US Senate Intelligen­ce Committee report detailed use of the techniques as part of former President George W Bush’s national security policies.

In a statement released in Geneva, Mr Emmerson said the report shows “there was a clear policy orchestrat­ed at a high level within the Bush administra­tion, which allowed (it) to commit systematic crimes and gross violations of internatio­nal human rights law”.

He said those responsibl­e for the “criminal conspiracy ... must face criminal penalties commensura­te with the gravity of their crimes”.

Senate investigat­ors concluded that the US brutalised scores of terror suspects with interrogat­ion tactics that turned secret CIA prisons into chambers of suffering and did nothing to make America safer after the September 11 attacks.

The report accused the CIA of misleading its political masters about what it was doing with its “black site” captives and deceiving Americans about the effectiven­ess of its techniques.

The report, the first public accounting of tactics employed after 9/11, described far harsher actions than had been widely known.

Tactics included confinemen­t to small boxes, weeks of sleep deprivatio­n, simulated drowning, slapping and slamming, and threats to kill, harm or sexually abuse families of the captives.

President Barack Obama told the Spanish-language TV network Telemundo that some of the past practices were “brutal, and as I’ve said before, constitute­d torture in my mind. And that’s not who we are.”

He added: “One of the things that sets us apart from other countries is that when we make mistakes, we admit them.”

Then-president Mr Bush approved the programme through a covert finding in 2002, but he was not briefed by the CIA about the details until 2006.

At that time he expressed discomfort with the “image of a detainee, chained to the ceiling, clothed in a nappy and forced to go to the bathroom on himself”.

Five hundred pages were re- leased, representi­ng the executive summary and conclusion­s of a still-classified 6,700-page full investigat­ion.

Senator Dianne Feinstein, the Democratic committee chairman whose staff prepared the summary, branded the findings a stain on US history.

“Under any common meaning of the term, CIA detainees were tortured,” she declared.

In a statement, CIA director John Brennan said the agency made mistakes and has learned from them.

But he also asserted that the coercive techniques “did produce intelligen­ce that helped thwart attack plans, capture terrorists and save lives”.

Former Polish president Aleksander Kwasniewsk­i said that during his term Poland offered the CIA a site for a secret prison but did not authorise the harsh treatment of inmates.

It is the first time a Polish leader has admitted the country hosted a secret CIA site. Reports say it operated from December 2002 until the autumn of 2003.

Mr Kwasniewsk­i was in power from 1995 to 2005. He said the activity in Poland was terminated under pressure from its leaders.

There was a clear policy orchestrat­ed at

a high level. Ben Emmerson, UN’s special rapporteur on counter-terrorism and human rights.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom