|
by catnip
Crossposted at Booman Tribune
The US government's practice of flying terrorist suspects oversees to be tortured by willing regimes is about to come under investigation in Scotland. The policy, framed by the innocuous phrase extraordinary rendition has escalated since 9/11 under the guidance of President Bush and his legal advisers, most particularly Alberto Gonzales. It would be interesting to ask Harriet Miers about her views and input to Bush about this issue if she makes it to the upcoming hearings. Back to Scotland: following an investigative report by Scotland's Sunday Herald columnist Neil Mackay on October 16, 2005 in which he noted these details, the Herald is now reporting that the Scotland police have launched their own investigation:
The programme is reviled by human rights groups around the world, but the UK is a keen supporter. Since 9/11, the CIA's 33-strong fleet of planes, which is used to fly its human cargo of alleged terrorist captives around the globe, has stopped off for refuelling and other logistical support at UK airports on no less than 210 occasions.
The Scottish police have the authority to board the flights bringing in suspects:
Craig Murray, former British ambassador to Uzbekistan, said : "Once these planes land on British soil, they have no immunity. If they touch down at a civilian airport they are under civilian jurisdiction. This would allow the police to do their job fully and to board the plane and question those on board." And, this is one CIA official's reaction:
The CIA refused categorically to comment. One CIA official merely laughed when told that Scottish police were to investigate. It is exactly that attitude that shows everyone that it's Bush's policies, not those of a "few bad apples", that are the driving force behind violating international laws - most particularly the ban against torture.
The practice began during the 1990s under the auspices of the CIA but was reportedly rarely used until Bush declared his war on terror and began stripping away almost every possible civil and international right that citizens had up until that point.
more... Read more... (4 comments, 454 words in story) |
Recommended Diaries
Hunger March wins PR battle
by DoDo - Feb 9 2 comments Romania: protests change government by DoDo - Feb 8 6 comments Murdoch - Outsourcing and Hubris by ceebs - Feb 3 18 comments Bristol Pound by ChrisCook - Feb 7 14 comments Obama wins GOP Primaries (to date) by Frank Schnittger - Feb 8 8 comments The Imitation Of Germany by afew - Feb 4 31 comments Answers to the Renewable Energy Consultation by Luis de Sousa - Feb 7 Strange Fruit by Frank Schnittger - Feb 4 10 comments Recent Diaries
Hunger March wins PR battle
by DoDo - Feb 9 2 comments Obama wins GOP Primaries (to date) by Frank Schnittger - Feb 8 8 comments Romania: protests change government by DoDo - Feb 8 6 comments Answers to the Renewable Energy Consultation by Luis de Sousa - Feb 7 Bristol Pound by ChrisCook - Feb 7 14 comments The Imitation Of Germany by afew - Feb 4 31 comments Strange Fruit by Frank Schnittger - Feb 4 10 comments Murdoch - Outsourcing and Hubris by ceebs - Feb 3 18 comments Mismatch with the Natural Gas Market by Luis de Sousa - Feb 3 22 comments The Future of Economics by ARGeezer - Feb 2 191 comments Desert Island Discs - Helen's distortions by Helen - Jan 31 48 comments Gorila by DoDo - Jan 29 14 comments Rail News Blogging #7 by DoDo - Jan 29 15 comments Obama's State Of The Union: LQD by Crazy Horse - Jan 25 74 comments Democracy Technology by gmoke - Jan 24 1 comment The Hydrogen dream by Luis de Sousa - Jan 24 49 comments ET Paris Meet-Up 2012 (2 UPDATE) by afew - Jan 23 113 comments Democracy in the EU by afew - Jan 23 52 comments Croatia to reject EU accession Sunday? by SteelLady - Jan 21 19 comments Surplusses and taxation by das monde - Jan 21 7 comments More Diaries... Occasional Series
Blogroll
ASSOCIATED SITES
BooMan The Oil Drum Energize America L'Etoile de Martin
THE TRAIL BLAZERS
THE EDITORIAL TEAM
OUR COUSINS FROM AMERICA
EUROPEANS
EUROTRIB USER BLOGS OR RECOMMENDATIONS
Inside the USA (FR)
ENERGY
ECON
Recent Comments
|
||||
| ||||||