Britain finds no requests for CIA flights (AP) Updated: 2005-12-13 09:16
The British government has not received any requests from the United States
to allow CIA flights carrying prisoners to stop in Britain, Foreign Secretary
Jack Straw said Monday.
News reports and the civil liberties group Liberty have claimed that 200 or
more prisoner flights may have passed through British airports. The United
States calls its practice of moving prisoners between countries "extraordinary
rendition."
"Careful research has been unable to identify any occasion ... when we have
received a request for permission by the United States for a rendition through
the United Kingdom territory or airspace," Straw told British Broadcasting Corp.
radio.
"Our people have checked through all the detail of the Liberty suggestions.
They have found no records which corroborate either the details of what Liberty
say and no papers relating to any policy considerations of what Liberty say."
Meanwhile, European Union Justice and Home Affairs Commissioner Franco
Frattini said he had asked for flight logs and satellite images to help the
Council of Europe's investigation into allegations of CIA secret prisons and
flights on European territory.
A plane suspected
of being used by the US Central Intelligence Agency (CIA) departing from
Palma de Mallorca airport, Mallorca, Spain.
[AFP/file] | Frattini said he had asked EU Transport Commissioner Jacques Barrot to
arrange for log books archived by the Brussels-based air safety organization
Eurocontrol to be made available to Dick Marty, the Swiss senator investigating
the allegations on behalf of the human rights watchdog.
Frattini also has asked External Relations Commissioner Benita
Ferrero-Waldner to help secure satellite images of air bases in northeastern
Poland and eastern Romania from the EU's main satellite center in Torrejon de
Ardoz, Spain.
But he reiterated that there is no clear evidence of any secret detention
centers on European soil, and that all EU member states have, through various
government officials, denied any involvement.
Liberty last week cited a report in The Guardian newspaper in September that
said 11 British airports and air bases allowed jets operated or chartered by the
CIA to stop over on 210 occasions since 2001.
Menzies Campbell, foreign affairs spokesman for the Liberal Democrat Party,
said he accepted that Straw's comments were made in good faith.
"But the truth is that the British authorities simply don't know whether
'extraordinary rendition' is taking place using British airfields," Campbell
said.
"The sooner we have a system of inspection, the better."
Straw, however, said there was a "pretty clear picture" that no suspects were
brought through Britain.
"The practice of the United States government has in the past been to seek
permission," he said.
US Secretary of State Condoleezza Rice had given assurances that flights were
not occurring through Britain without permission.
"We have checked the records as carefully as we can and I believe the answer
we have given from the records suggest that there have been no such flights
through United Kingdom territory," Straw said.
"We will continue to look at the evidence that Liberty and others have
provided and to carry on making those checks."
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