[Ppnews] UK responsible for the illegal rendition of Muhammed Madni
Political Prisoner News
ppnews at freedomarchives.org
Tue Jul 28 14:09:46 EDT 2009
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BRIEFING: DIEGO GARCIA LITIGATION
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http://www.reprieve.org.uk/mohammedsaadiqbalmadniactionagainstbritishgov
On Tuesday 28th July Reprieve will announce a
lawsuit against the British government on behalf
of torture victim Mohammed Saad Iqbal Madni.
Reprieve believes the UK shares responsibility
for the illegal rendition of Mr Madni through the
British Overseas Territory Diego Garcia, and thus
for his subsequent torture and ill treatment in
Egypt, Afghanistan and Guantánamo Bay.
Reprieve will launch two distinct sets of legal
proceedings on behalf of Mr Madni.
1) Legal action in the Supreme Court of the
British Indian Ocean Territories (BIOT),
responsible for Diego Garcia, to compel the
British Colonial authorities to provide all
information they have about Mr Madni's
extraordinary rendition through Diego Garcia and
his subsequent ill-treatment and torture.
2) The same action in the UK Courts to compel the
UK Government to provide all information they have about Mr Madnis case.
The reason for bringing the claim in both
jurisdictions is that the colonial authorities
and the UK Government are legally distinct and
subject to the two different jurisdictions. The
BIOT Court also only exists in theory; no civil
claim has ever been brought there because there
is no civilian population on Diego Garcia.
These two claims are required in order to obtain
an admission that Diego Garcia was used in Mr
Madnis case to assist his unlawful rendition and
ultimate torture in Cairo and elsewhere. If these
actions are successful in establishing the facts,
subsequent claims can then be brought by Madni
for damages in a number of jurisdictions.
Background
The issue of illegal detentions and renditions
involving Diego Garcia was first publicly raised
in December 2002 in an open letter authored by
Human Rights Watch UK and addressed to ex-Prime
Minister Tony Blair. It warned: The treatment of
detainees on Diego Garcia
implicates the legal
obligations of the British government.
In a subsequent series of parliamentary questions
and answers between 2003 and 2008, the British
government consistently denied the presence of
detainees on the island, repeatedly referring to
firm assurances given by the United States that
at no time have there been any detainees on
Diego Garcia. Neither have they transited through
the territorial seas or airspace surrounding
Diego Garcia. (UK Intelligence and Security
Committees report on renditions, July 2007)
The UKs sole reliance on US assurances belies
the fact that there is a significant British
military and administrative presence on Diego
Garcia the Brits own the island, according to
one former US serviceman and that the UK also
has clear civil and criminal legal jurisdiction.
Diego Garcia is part of the British Indian Ocean
Territory (BIOT). Its independent
administration is run by the East Africa Desk of
the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (the FCO)
in London. The Commanding Officer of the islands
civil administration is the British
Representative, who is under the authority of the
FCO. The British Representative is also Commander
of the Royal Navy, the Magistrate, the Coroner,
and the Register of Marriages. Approximately
fifty further British Royal Navy and Marines
personnel work for the civil administration.
While the 1966 Anglo-American Agreement grants
the US military authorities the right to exercise
criminal and disciplinary jurisdiction over
persons subject to US military law, the UK
authorities retain exclusive jurisdiction over
members of United States forces with respect to
offences, including offences relating to
security, punishable by law in force in the
territory but not by the law of the United States.
Finally, on 21st February 2008, David Miliband
conceded by statement to Parliament and by letter
to Clive Stafford Smith that, contrary to US
assurances, two rendition flights carrying US
prisoners had stopped on Diego Garcia for
refuelling in January 2002 and September 2002
respectively. Despite his pledge at that time to
work through the details and implications of
this information, the British government has
done nothing further to clarify the situation
beyond the Foreign Ministers declaration on 12th
February 2009 (in response to a parliamentary
question) asserting that both individuals
rendered through the island had been returned to their native countries.
With the limited information made available to
them, Reprieve identified one of the two
detainees as Mohammed Saad Iqbal Madni based on this process of deduction:
· One of the prisoners was released from
Guantánamo at some point between 14th February 2008 and November 2009.
· From that list, individuals apprehended
after January 2002 were discarded.
· From that list, individuals whose
detention histories do not include renditions
where Diego Garcia would be a feasible refuelling stopover were discarded.
· One detainee remained: Mr Madni.
Mr Madni was seized at 4am on 9th January 2002,
in Jakarta, Indonesia. He reports that on the
evening of 10th January he was bundled aboard a
plane, which took off around 10pm. This is
corroborated by eyewitness reports at a military
airport in Jakarta and by Eurocontrol flight
logs. Mr Madni has also stated that the plane
stopped over once during the flight from
Indonesia to Egypt. During the stopover he was
hooded, and never removed from the plane,
although cameramen entered the plane and photographed him.
The Gulfstream jet, tail number N379P, which was
almost certainly used in Mr Madnis rendition has
a cruising speed of between 459 and 585 knots.
Not only would a stopover on Diego Garcia be
eminently feasible in a long flight across the
Indian Ocean, but furthermore Mr Madnis
estimates of the durations of both legs of his
journeys are consistent with the distances
between Jakarta, Diego Garcia and Cairo and the cruising speed of N379P.
Eurocontrol flight logs indicate that N379P
stopped over in Cairo for six days after dropping
him, before returning to Washington via Prestwick
(again utilising UK territory). It is possible,
therefore, that some of the US rendition crew
were present at Madnis interrogations on 11th
and 12th January, during which masked men were
present who passed notes to his Egyptian interrogators.
During his rendition flight, Mr Madni reports, he
was bleeding from his mouth, nose and ears, and
shackled so tightly that he was unable to move.
Once in Cairo, he alleges, his Egyptian
interrogators tortured him using electric shocks
and drugs, attempting to extract confessions of
meetings with Osama bin Laden and trips to
Afghanistan that had never taken place.
He had been apprehended by the Indonesians at the
behest of US authorities after commenting to a
radical Islamist whom he had met in Jakarta that
bombs could be hidden in his shoes; intelligence
agents monitoring the man picked up on this
comment and made a connection with Richard Reids
failed shoe bomb attack. Mr Madni was, in the
words of his uncle, a man who had a childish
habit of trying to portray himself as important,
and according to a US intelligence official, a
blowhard [who] wanted us to believe he was more
important than he was; the comment was no indication of genuine threat.
From Cairo, Mr Madni was transferred first to
Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan, and subsequently
to Guantánamo. At Bagram he was shackled and
handcuffed in a small cage with other detainees,
and for a period of six months was shifted from
cell to cell every few hours so that he was
deprived of sleep. By the time he arrived in
Guantánamo he was, according to fellow prisoners,
passing blood in his feces and having bladder
problems; his interrogators apparently made full
cooperation a condition of medical treatment. He
went on three hunger strikes and attempted to hang himself twice.
Mr Madni ultimately spent over seven years in US
custody. Consequently he is now unable to walk
unaided and suffers debilitative psychological scarring.
The 1976 Exchange of Notes between the UK and US
governments in relation to Diego Garcia clearly
requires that the UK must be informed of all
intended movements of US ships and aircraft on or
through BIOT territory. In addition, the UK
Foreign Office has stated that the US would
require the permission of the UK to bring
unlawful combatants onto the island.
Despite this, it has been extremely difficult to
obtain any flight records involving Diego Garcia.
In response to questions about this, Margaret
Beckett has said: It was very difficult for the
government
There was not a clear, simple trace of
record keeping. More than one independent source
has suggested that flight logs through Diego Garcia have been destroyed.
Another possible explanation for the absence of
conventional flight records may be that Mr
Madnis rendition flight operated under a
special status designator (STS indicator). An
examination of detailed records available for
four other rendition flights conducted by N379P
reveal that the plane routinely operated under
such indicators. If they were used in the course
of Mr Madnis flight, these indicators would
suggest knowledge of, authorisation for, and full
collaboration in, the rendition at the highest
echelons of both operating state (the United
States) and host state (the United Kingdom).
INFORMATION NEEDED FROM THE BRITISH GOVERNMENT
The UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office must urgently clarify:
· The scope and terms of the FCOs
inquiry into renditions, and is the inquiry ongoing.
· How long it has known the identities,
rendition histories and current situations of the people concerned.
· Why it has not released this information.
· What assurances, if any, have been
sought by the British and/or granted by the
Americans in relation to these individuals, and when.
· When the British government became
aware of the apprehension of Mohammed Saad Iqbal
Madni, or of an individual believed at the time
to be a close associate of Richard Reid.
· If they knew about Mr Madnis
apprehension at the time that he was transferred through Diego Garcia.
· If and when any British personnel saw
or spoke to Mr Madni while he was being
transferred through Diego Garcia or at any time
between his apprehension in January 2002 and his release in August 2009.
· If and when the British government
sought assurances from the US or Egyptian
government as to Mr Madnis treatment while he was in Egypt.
· If and when the British government
sought assurances from the US government as to Mr
Madnis treatment while he was in Afghanistan.
· If and when the British government
sought assurances from the US government as to Mr
Madnis treatment while he was in Guantánamo.
The UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office must urgently reveal:
· All records and communications,
including flight logs, flight manifests, and any
other records, corroborating Mr Madnis account
of his illegal detention and torture in Egypt.
· All records and communications,
including flight logs, flight manifests, and any
other records, corroborating Mr Madnis account
of his illegal detention and torture in Afghanistan.
· All records and communications,
including flight logs, flight manifests, and any
other records, corroborating Mr Madnis account
of his illegal detention and torture in Guantánamo.
· All internal UK government, military
and other communications and records relating in
any way to flights through, or transfers of prisoners through, Diego Garcia.
· All communications and records between
the UK government or military and any foreign
government or military relating in any way to
flights through, or transfers of prisoners through, Diego Garcia.
· How many flight logs were destroyed and their content.
· The routine practise for destruction of such records.
· When these particular records were destroyed.
· Why these particular records were destroyed.
· When the first questions were posed about rendition flights.
· Whether the records had been destroyed
by the time questions were regularly being posed about rendition flights.
· Who authorised the destruction of these
logs, and who was aware of the decision either at the time or subsequently.
The UK Foreign and Commonwealth Office must urgently request:
· Any records and communications,
including photographs, corroborating Mr Madnis
account of his illegal detention and torture in Egypt from the US government.
· Any records and communications,
including photographs, corroborating Mr Madnis
account of his illegal detention and torture in
Afghanistan from the US government.
· Any records and communications,
including photographs, corroborating Mr Madnis
account of his illegal detention and torture in Guantánamo.
Freedom Archives
522 Valencia Street
San Francisco, CA 94110
415 863-9977
www.Freedomarchives.org
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