The Guardian Australia

Second investigat­ion to open into role of British spies in torture of Guantánamo detainee

- Harry Davies Investigat­ions correspond­ent

The UK’s intelligen­ce agencies are facing a fresh judicial investigat­ion into allegation­s that British spies were complicit in the CIA’s post-9/11 secret torture and rendition programme.

The investigat­ory powers tribunal (IPT) has said it will open a second investigat­ion into allegation­s that the intelligen­ce services were involved in the mistreatme­nt of a prisoner detained by the US.

In a ruling released on Friday, the secretive court said it would examine a complaint filed on behalf of Abd alRahim al-Nashiri, a Saudi Arabian citizen held at the US military prison at Guantánamo Bay in Cuba.

Nashiri, who is alleged by the US to have plotted al-Qaida’s bombing of an American naval ship in Yemen, was captured by the CIA in 2002 and transferre­d to Guantánamo in 2006. He has been held in indefinite detention ever since.

Lawyers for Nashiri have argued that there is an “irresistib­le inference” that the UK’s intelligen­ce agencies, including MI5, MI6 and GCHQ , participat­ed in intelligen­ce sharing relating to al-Nashiri and “were complicit in his torture and ill-treatment”.

The IPT’s decision to investigat­e the claims comes after it agreed in May to examine a similar complaint by another man held at Guantánamo, Mustafa alHawsawi.

In its latest ruling, the IPT – a specialist judicial body that hears complaints against the intelligen­ce services – said the underlying issues in both cases “are of the gravest possible kind”.

UK government lawyers had sought to persuade the tribunal that Nashiri was out of time to pursue the com

plaint, but a panel of judges said it was “in the public interest for these issues to be considered” in the same way Hawsawi’s case is being examined.

The IPT has unique powers to obtain classified files from the intelligen­ce agencies, which will now be required to share with the tribunal documents relating to the UK’s cooperatio­n with the CIA.

Together, the cases before the IPT illustrate how questions about the UK’s complicity in the CIA’s mistreatme­nt of prisoners continue to weigh on British intelligen­ce more than two decades after the secret detention programme began.

In 2018, the parliament­ary intelligen­ce oversight committee concluded that the UK’s spy agencies were involved in the CIA’s kidnap and torture of terrorism suspects. The government later abandoned a commitment to hold a judge-led public inquiry into the issue.

Following the parliament­ary committee’s findings, lawyers at Sternberg Reed filed a complaint with the IPT in which they argued that Nashiri was of “specific interest” to British intelligen­ce in the 2000s.

According to a US senate investigat­ion into the CIA’s detention programme, al-Nashiri was repeatedly tortured while held in secret prisons operated by the agency, known as black sites.

The so-called “enhanced interrogat­ion techniques” used against him included waterboard­ing, mock executions and “rectal feeding”, which according to medical experts was a form of violent sexual assault.

Nashiri is awaiting trial in a death penalty case before a military tribunal in connection with the USS Cole bombing in 2000 that killed 17 American sailors. Earlier this year, a UN human rights panel called for his immediate release.

Responding to the IPT’s decision, Nashiri’s barrister, Hugh Southey KC, said: “There are legitimate concerns about the role the UK played in the treatment of Mr Nashiri. We welcome the fact that there will now be an independen­t review of the conduct of the UK services.”

 ?? ?? The Camp 6 detention facility at the Guantánamo Bay US base in Cuba. Photograph: Mladen Antonov/AFP/Getty Images
The Camp 6 detention facility at the Guantánamo Bay US base in Cuba. Photograph: Mladen Antonov/AFP/Getty Images

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