RT.com, October
30, 2013
Poland has
asked the European Court of Human Rights to bar media and public presence
during an upcoming hearing on Poland’s complicity with the CIA’s “extraordinary
rendition” program that delivered terror suspects to secret prisons around the
world.
The public
hearing in Strasbourg, France, scheduled for Dec. 3, will be the first
arguments testing allegations that the Polish government allowed the CIA to
operate a jail for supposed Al-Qaeda fighters in Poland.
The request
for a private hearing “will be examined by the court shortly,” a court
spokesperson told Reuters.
Poland
cited national security concerns as to why it wants the hearing to remain
confidential. The Polish government would not comment on the story.
A Polish
human rights group criticized the request for privacy, saying the public deserves
to know whether Poland allowed the CIA to hide prisoners from the American
court system.
"We
should have the right to review this case in public," said Adam Bodnar,
vice president of the Warsaw-based Helsinki Foundation for Human Rights.
"I do not see a reason for confidentiality of proceedings."
Bodnar
added that most of the evidence about the alleged CIA jail is already public,
and keeping it secret is pointless now. His organization was instrumental in
uncovering evidence of Poland’s cooperation with the agency.
Former
President George W. Bush acknowledged the existence of the secret detention
centers, or “black sites,” run by the CIA on September 6, 2006 - nearly a year
after they were first exposed by news outlets and NGOs.
Poland
began its own secretive investigation into the prison allegations in 2008. In
early 2012, Poland's Prosecutor General's office began an investigation into
former Polish intelligence chief Zbigniew Siemiątkowski, who was charged in
March 2012 with facilitating the alleged CIA prison.
The
European Court of Human Rights (ECHR) case was brought by lawyers for Abu
Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri, both now detainees waiting for charges at
Guantanamo Bay.
The men
allege they were kidnapped and held by the CIA at an intelligence training
facility near Stare Kiejkuty, in northeast Poland. There, suspects “were
subjected to enforced disappearance and tortured between 2002 and 2005,”
Amnesty International said.
Nashiri
claims that while at the Polish site, he was subjected to torture, or “enhanced
interrogation techniques,” and other harsh treatments, “such as ‘mock
execution’ with a gun and threats of sexual assault against his family
members,” Amnesty reported.
Zubaydah
was waterboarded 83 times in one month while in secret CIA detention.
Nashiri and
Zubaydah are also listed as parties in Poland’s own investigation - which is
separate from the European Court’s case - along with a recently-added third
man, Yemeni Walid Bin Attash.
Polish
officials maintain the country did not host CIA jails, though they admit that
in 2002 and 2003, the CIA landed aircraft at a remote airfield near the site of
the alleged jail in northern Poland.
Hosting
such a secret prison violates the European Convention on Human Rights and the
UN Convention Against Torture, both of which all European Union member states
are bound to follow.
The Polish
government has said it would prefer its own investigation to run to completion
before the European court starts its case. But rights activists and lawyers for
the alleged detainees said the Polish investigation has slowed to avoid
embarrassing of the government, though prosecutors deny those allegations.
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