Britain 'complicit' in human rights abuses at Camp Delta
By Jerome Taylor
03/28/06 "The
Independent" -- -- Britain has been complicit in
the human rights abuses committed by US authorities at
Guantanamo Bay prison camp, according to a report released
today.
Drawing on exhaustive interviews with detainees and evidence
from security services, the dossier gives the complete picture
of the British government's co- operation with the US over a
camp it now says should be closed.
The report, Fabricating Terrorism - British Complicity in
Renditions and Terror, is a scathing indictment of the British
government's "systematic violations of international law" over
its co-operation with the US authorities in the detention of
British citizens and residents at the US-run facility in Cuba.
The research, compiled by the human rights group Cage Prisoners,
plots British involvement in the cases of 13 current or former
Guantanamo detainees - either British citizens or residents.
All the detainees in the report consistently testified that UK
authorities were aware of their plight and unwilling to
intervene despite the knowledge that they were either at risk of
torture or said they had been tortured.
There is no suggestion British authorities played any part in
torturing the detainees but the report does argue consistent
co-operation between the US and UK has led to an "international
chain of abuse" that flies in the face of the British government
projecting itself as a leader in the field of human rights.
One of the most serious cases surrounds the rendition,
imprisonment and alleged torture of Benyam Mohammed al-Habashi,
an Ethiopian national with British residency, who was arrested
in April 2002 as he tried to leave Pakistan. Benyam was later
"rendered" to Morocco and Afghanistan before arriving in
Guantanamo in September 2004. Mr al-Habashi claims that, while
in a secret detention facility south of the Moroccan capital
Rabat, he was brutally tortured by his interrogators as they
asked questions that could only have been supplied by the
British.
In December last year, Jack Straw was forced to admit that MI6
had interrogated Mr al-Habashi in Pakistan before he was sent to
Morocco but insisted the security services "did not observe any
abuse".
Clive Stafford Smith, Mr al-Habashi's lawyer, argues that the
nature of his client's imprisonment in Morocco makes the British
government complicit in his torture. "The British government was
complicit in some of the abuses that took place against Benyam
... to the extent that the Government told the Moroccans
information that they would use against him in the torture
sessions." Now on hunger strike, Mr al-Habashi is one of 10
Guantanamo detainees waiting to be tried by a US Military
Commission.
Two British residents, Omar Deghayes and Shaker Aamer, both
still incarcerated in Guantanamo also say they were questioned
by British authorities before their rendition and imprisonment
in Guantanamo. Similarly, many of those who have since been
released without charge also accuse London of knowing well in
advance that they were being transported to Cuba.
The latest findings show mounting evidence of consistent
involvement and presence of UK officials in run up to the
transfer of many British citizens and residents to Guantanamo.
"In nearly every single case," the report says, "British
intelligence was fully aware of the status of these individuals
and still allowed for their transfer."
Geoffrey Bindman, the chairman of the British Institute of Human
Rights, argues that each case study shows a worrying level of UK
collusion. "If substantiated," he writes in the report's
forward, "they demonstrate an intolerable level of collaboration
and collusion between the UK and US authorities in the abuses
which have taken place at Guantanamo and elsewhere through the
'outsourcing' of torture.
"They also demonstrate a pathetic reluctance on the part of the
UK government to stand up for the rights of its citizens and
permanent residents against illegal and unacceptable treatment."
The government has argued it is unable to intervene on behalf of
those British residents still left in Guantanamo such as Mr
Deghayes and Mr Aamer because they do not hold British
passports.
Asim Qureshi of Cage Prisoners said he hoped the report would
help alert British citizens to the dangerous policies that are
being carried out in their name. "Rendition and torture do not
help build security but instead only compromise the standing and
security of the British Government in the international
community."
Rendered to Guantanamo?
* BINYAM MOHAMMED AL-HABASHI
Visited by MI6 agents while in prison in Karachi who told him he
would be moved to Morocco. Upon arrival, MI5 agents supplied
interrogators with information to ease the extraction of
confessions. He remains in Guantanamo Bay.
* JAMAL AL-HARITH
Fell into the hands of US forces while imprisoned by the Taliban
in Afghanistan. Despite promises to help establish his
innocence, the British Embassy in Kabul permitted his rendition
to Guantanamo Bay.
* JAMIL EL BANNA,
BISHER AL-RAWI
Picked up by authorities in the Gambia on the advice of the
British and subsequently rendered to Guantanamo. Still
imprisoned.
* MOAZZAM BEGG
Regularly questioned by British authorities in Pakistan and
Afghanistan, who allowed rendition.
* MARTIN MUBANGA
British intelligence supplied evidence leading to his arrest in
Lusaka. Questioned regularly by British agents. MI5 still
allowed US forces to render him to Guantanamo.
* OMAR DEGHAYES
Interrogated by a British officer by the name of "Andrew" in
Pakistan, who promised to return him home if he co-operated.
Despite complying, he was sent to Guantanamo, where he remains.
* RICHARD BELMAR
Held in Pakistan where requests from the British Consulate to
visit him fell on deaf ears. By the time access was granted,
Belmar was on his way to Guantanamo. M15 had been permitted full
access from day one.
* THE TIPTON THREE: SHAFIQ RASUL, RHUHEL AHMED, ASIF IQBAL
Held by US forces in Afghanistan, where they were questioned by
British officials before being rendered.
* SHAKER AAMER
Interrogated by MI5 and MI6 in Kandahar. On hunger strike in
Guantanamo.
* TAREK DERGOUL
Questioned in Afghanistan by British forces. Believing they
intended to help, he complied. He was rendered to Guantanamo.
Source: Fabricating Terrorism British Complicity in Renditions
and Torture by Cage Prisoners.
© 2006 Independent News and Media Limited