CIA sent prisoners to Jordan
Source: aljazeera.net, 08-04-2008
The CIA secretly transferred at least 14 'war on terror' suspects to Jordan for interrogation and torture, a leading rights group says.
Human Rights Watch, based in New York, said Jordan, one of the US's key allies in the Middle East, held prisoners and carried out interrogations on behalf of the CIA until at least 2004.
"While a handful of countries received persons rendered by the United States during this period, no other country is believed to have held as many as Jordan,'' the group said in a press release.
However Nasser Judeh, Jordan's information minister, said the findings were "baseless and untrue," state media reported.
Judeh said that groups involved in attacks were attempting to defame Jordan by providing "fabricated information which could reach human rights organisations."
Under the CIA rendition program, suspects were flown from one country to another, usually in secrecy, without the benefit of open legal proceedings.
US officials have acknowledged flying around 150 suspects from one country to another, but say they received diplomatic assurances from foreign authorities torture would not be used on the detainees.
'Abusive interrogation'
The group said Jordan commonly tortured suspects by given them extended beatings on the soles of their feet.
"The Bush administration claims that it has not transferred people to foreign custody for abusive interrogation,'' said Joanne Mariner, terrorism and counterterrorism director at Human Rights Watch.
"But we've documented more than a dozen cases in which prisoners were sent to Jordan for torture."
It said at least five Yemenis, three Algerians, two Saudis, a Mauritanian, a Syrian, a Tunisian, and one or more Chechens from
Russia were rendered to Jordan.
Five of the men who had been sent to Jordan are now in US custody in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, it added.
Inquiry urged
One part of the report details a note written by a rendered prisoner - reportedly since transferred to the Guantanamo Bay - while in Jordanian custody in late 2002 which refers to his ill treatment.
Ali al-Hajj al-Sharqawi wrote that GID interrogators beat him "in a way that does not know any limits".
"They threatened me with electricity, with snakes and dogs ... [They said] we'll make you see death ... They threatened to rape me," it said.
The group urged the US government to discontinue the CIA's rendition program and urged Jordan to open an inquiry into its intelligence department's alleged use of torture and ill-treatment.
Human Rights Watch said its report was based on first hand information from former Jordanian prisoners who had been detained with the non-Jordanian terrorism suspects.
The CIA secretly transferred at least 14 'war on terror' suspects to Jordan for interrogation and torture, a leading rights group says.
Human Rights Watch, based in New York, said Jordan, one of the US's key allies in the Middle East, held prisoners and carried out interrogations on behalf of the CIA until at least 2004.
"While a handful of countries received persons rendered by the United States during this period, no other country is believed to have held as many as Jordan,'' the group said in a press release.
However Nasser Judeh, Jordan's information minister, said the findings were "baseless and untrue," state media reported.
Judeh said that groups involved in attacks were attempting to defame Jordan by providing "fabricated information which could reach human rights organisations."
Under the CIA rendition program, suspects were flown from one country to another, usually in secrecy, without the benefit of open legal proceedings.
US officials have acknowledged flying around 150 suspects from one country to another, but say they received diplomatic assurances from foreign authorities torture would not be used on the detainees.
'Abusive interrogation'
The group said Jordan commonly tortured suspects by given them extended beatings on the soles of their feet.
"The Bush administration claims that it has not transferred people to foreign custody for abusive interrogation,'' said Joanne Mariner, terrorism and counterterrorism director at Human Rights Watch.
"But we've documented more than a dozen cases in which prisoners were sent to Jordan for torture."
It said at least five Yemenis, three Algerians, two Saudis, a Mauritanian, a Syrian, a Tunisian, and one or more Chechens from
Russia were rendered to Jordan.
Five of the men who had been sent to Jordan are now in US custody in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, it added.
Inquiry urged
One part of the report details a note written by a rendered prisoner - reportedly since transferred to the Guantanamo Bay - while in Jordanian custody in late 2002 which refers to his ill treatment.
Ali al-Hajj al-Sharqawi wrote that GID interrogators beat him "in a way that does not know any limits".
"They threatened me with electricity, with snakes and dogs ... [They said] we'll make you see death ... They threatened to rape me," it said.
The group urged the US government to discontinue the CIA's rendition program and urged Jordan to open an inquiry into its intelligence department's alleged use of torture and ill-treatment.
Human Rights Watch said its report was based on first hand information from former Jordanian prisoners who had been detained with the non-Jordanian terrorism suspects.
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