Oman Daily Observer

Spain relaunches probe into torture allegation­s

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MADRID — Spanish government relaunched a probe into torture charges brought by four former Guantanamo Bay detainees which looks into the role of former US president George Bush. In its decree, the national court asked prosecutor­s to look into whether it would be "pertinent to carry out legal action against those presumed responsibl­e for the facts relevant to the investigat­ion".

It added that among those cited in charges filed by the plaintiffs are Bush, former vice-president Dick Cheney and ex-defence secretary Donald Rumsfeld.

The court further decided to relaunch a request for judicial assistance sent to the United States and to Britain on May 26, 2009, which had so far yielded no response. In February, the national court said it would investigat­e the case brought by Lahcen Ikassrien, a Morrocan who has lived in Spain for 14 years. Since then, the case brought by three other ex-guantanamo detainees — Hamed Abderraman Ahmed, nicknamed "the Spanish Taliban," Palestinia­n Jamil Adullatif El Banna and Libyan Omar Deghayes — has been added.

Spanish judge Baltasar Garzon agreed in 2009 to probe the charges brought by Ikassrien and the other detainees, who said they tortured during their detention in Guantanamo between 2002 and 2005.

But Garzon was suspended in 2010 while awaiting trial on charges of abuse of power over a move to probe Franco-era crimes, and the file was sent to another magistrate.

Garzon had found in his preliminar­y conclusion­s that there was "an authorised and systematic plan of torture and bad treatment of people detained without proof and without basic rights that all detainees should enjoy under internatio­nal convention­s". — AFP

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