Original Article
Terror war called rights-law breach
Daniel Friedli
Associated Press
Jan. 14, 2006 12:00 AM
BURGDORF, Switzerland - The head of a European investigation into reputed CIA prisons on the continent on Friday accused the United States of violating international human rights law in its war on terror.
Dick Marty, the Swiss lawmaker leading the probe on behalf of the Council of Europe, said there was no question the CIA was undertaking illegal activities in Europe in its transportation and detention of terror suspects.
"The strategy in place today respects neither human rights nor the Geneva Conventions," Marty said at a news conference in the Swiss town of Burgdorf. "The current administration in Washington is trying to combat terrorism outside legal means, the rule of law."
The Council of Europe, the continent's main human rights watchdog, began its investigation after allegations surfaced in November that U.S. agents interrogated key al-Qaida suspects at clandestine prisons in Eastern Europe and transported some suspects to other countries via Europe.
New York-based Human Rights Watch identified Romania and Poland as possible sites of secret U.S.-run detention facilities. Both countries have denied involvement.
Marty said European countries had "a fairly shocking attitude" toward U.S. policies and that attention should not be focused solely on Romania and Poland.
"The question is: Was the CIA really working in Europe? I believe we can say today, without a doubt, yes," he said.
"All the indications are that this 'extraordinary rendition' was already known about," Marty said, referring to the CIA program of transferring terrorism suspects to third countries where harsher interrogation methods, including torture, are allowed.
Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice has refused to address questions about clandestine CIA detention centers but says the United States acts within the law.
State Department spokesman Sean McCormack said Friday that he did not have a particular comment on Marty's remarks, adding that the U.S. has publicly addressed the issues in the past.
"The secretary had a good set of discussions with her foreign minister counterparts during her most recent trip to Europe, and I would expect that dialogue would continue," McCormack said in Washington. "It is a dialogue of mutual respect."
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