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Original Article
EU: CIA flew 1,000 secret flights
Lawmakers say U.S. sent terror suspects to torturing nations
Jan Sliva
Associated Press
Apr. 27, 2006 12:00 AM
BRUSSELS, Belgium - The CIA has conducted more than 1,000 clandestine flights in Europe since 2001, and some of them secretly took away terror suspects to countries where they could face torture, European Union lawmakers said Wednesday.
Legislators selected to look into allegations of questionable CIA activities in Europe said flight data showed a pattern of hidden operations by American agents, and they accused some European governments of knowing about it but remaining silent.
Cases of terror suspects being secretly handed over to U.S. agents did not appear to be isolated, the lawmakers said in a preliminary report on their inquiry. European human rights treaties prohibit sending suspects to states known to torture prisoners.
"The committee deplores the fact that, as established during the committee's investigation, the CIA has used aircraft registered under fictitious company names or with private companies to secretly transfer terror suspects to other countries, including Egypt, Jordan, Syria and Afghanistan," according to a copy of the report obtained by the Associated Press.
The CIA declined to comment, as did European Union officials, who have said previously that there was no irrefutable proof of such handovers, which are known as "extraordinary renditions."
The investigation began in January after news reports that U.S. agents had interrogated al-Qaida suspects at secret prisons in eastern Europe. But the focus shifted after people gave detailed accounts of being abducted by U.S. agents in Europe and whisked away to jails in the Middle East, Asia and North Africa.
Few of those who testified at the committee hearings touched on the alleged secret prisons in eastern Europe first reported by the Washington Post in November. Italian lawmaker Giovanni Fava said the committee would look into those allegations later.
The lawmakers based their initial report on data provided by Eurocontrol, the EU's air-safety agency, and testimony by EU officials, rights groups and individuals who said they were kidnapped and tortured by U.S. agents.
The report said that the CIA was clearly responsible for detaining terror suspects on European territory and transferring them to countries where they could face torture.
Fava said it was unclear how many people were transferred by the CIA on undeclared flights. He also said there was no evidence proving complicity by European officials but called it unlikely that some governments knew nothing about the CIA operations.
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