Bangkok Post

Details on CIA torture to be limited

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BENGALURU: The administra­tion of US President Joe Biden informed the Supreme Court that a suspected highrankin­g al-Qaeda figure held at the American naval base at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, could provide limited testimony about his torture at the hands of the CIA.

Earlier this month, US Supreme Court justices questioned why the US government will not let the detainee, Abu Zubaydah, testify.

Mr Zubaydah, a Palestinia­n man captured in 2002 in Pakistan and held by the United States since then without charges, repeatedly underwent waterboard­ing, a form of simulated drowning widely considered torture.

In response to questions from three justices during oral arguments earlier this month, Acting Solicitor General Brian Fletcher wrote a letter to the court on Friday informing the justices that Mr Zubaydah could provide a declaratio­n in the pending case.

“Nonetheles­s, the government would permit Abu Zubaydah, upon his request, to send a declaratio­n that could then be transmitte­d to the Polish investigat­ion,” Mr Fletcher wrote in the letter.

However, he added that any informatio­n could be subject to redaction if it might “prejudice the security interests of the United States”.

Poland is believed to be the location of a “black site” where the CIA used harsh interrogat­ion techniques against Mr Zubaydah.

Mr Zubaydah, now 50, has spent 15 years at Guantanamo and is one of many detainees still held there. He lost an eye and underwent waterboard­ing 83 times in a single month while held by the CIA, US government documents showed. He was “an associate and longtime terrorist ally of Osama bin Laden”, the leader of the al-Qaeda Islamist militant group killed by US forces in Pakistan in 2011, a Justice Department filing said earlier.

Mr Fletcher said in his letter that Mr Zubaydah’s testimony would not resolve the dispute that is currently before the justices concerning the scope of the “state secrets” privilege, a legal doctrine available to the government to protect informatio­n that it says may threaten national security.

 ?? ?? Zubaydah: Captured in 2002 in Pakistan
Zubaydah: Captured in 2002 in Pakistan

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