Amnesty International News Release on USA Front Companies Used In Secret Flights
                
                
 
                
                
                News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty  International
  
  
 USA: Front companies used in secret flights to torture and  "disappearance"
  
  
 Amnesty International today released a new report which exposes a covert  operation whereby people have been arrested or abducted, transferred and held in  secret or handed over to countries where they have faced torture and other  ill-treatment. The report describes how the CIA has used private aircraft  operators and front companies to preserve the secrecy of "rendition"  flights.
  
 Below the radar:
Secret flights to torture and 'disappearance', shows that  the CIA has exploited aviation practices that would otherwise require their  flights to be declared to aviation authorities. The report lists dozens of  destinations around the world where planes associated with "rendition" flights  have landed and taken off - and lists private airlines with permission to land  at US military bases worldwide.
  
 Amnesty International has records of nearly 1,000 flights directly linked  to the CIA, most of which have used European airspace; these are flights by  planes that appear to have been permanently operated by the CIA through front  companies. In a second category, there are records of some 600 other flights  made by planes confirmed as having been used at least temporarily by the  CIA.
  
 The report details the destinations and ownership of specific aircraft  linked to people interviewed by Amnesty International who have been transferred  illegally. For example one particular aircraft is known to have made over 100  stops in Guantanamo Bay. Another took Abu Omar to Egypt from Germany after he  was kidnapped in Italy. Its owners have admitted leasing the plane to the CIA,  but have said it is not used exclusively by the agency. There are 488 relevant  recorded landings or take-offs between February 2001 and July 2005.
  
 "The US Administration has tried to circumvent the ban on torture and other  ill-treatment in many ways. The latest evidence shows how the Administration is  manipulating commercial arrangements in order to be able to transfer people in  violation of international law. It demonstrates the length to which the US  government will go to conceal these abductions," said Amnesty International  Secretary General, Irene Khan.
  
 The report uncovers part of the mystery surrounding the practice of  renditions. Secrecy surrounding rendition operations means it is impossible to  know how many people have been arrested or abducted, transferred across borders,  held in secret detention or tortured in the 'war on terror'. Information from  governments themselves indicates that numbers are likely to be in the  hundreds.
  
 The report analyses new information about "black site" detention provided  to Amnesty International by three Yemeni men recently released after a two-year  rendition ordeal, which raises the possibility that they were held somewhere in  eastern Europe or Central Asia.
  
 Muhammad Al-Assad, Muhammad Bashmilah and Salah 'Ali Qaru spent 13 months  in one secret facility before being flown to Yemen in May 2005 and eventually  released last month.
  
 "Their captors went to great lengths to conceal their location to the men,  but circumstantial evidence such as climate, prayer schedules and flight times  to and from the site suggest that they may have been held in eastern Europe or  Central Asia," said senior advisor Anne FitzGerald.  "But without further  information from the US government and European authorities, it is impossible to  verify exactly where."
  
 Rendition is the illegal transfer of people from one country to another in  ways that bypass all judicial and administrative oversight. The aim of rendition  in the "war on terror" is usually to facilitate interrogation of suspects  outside the reach of the law.
  
 "Renditions are not just about transporting terror suspects from one place  to another without red tape. The term sanitises the multiple layers of human  rights violations involved," said Ms Khan.
  
 "Most victims of rendition were arrested and detained illegally in the  first place. Many were abducted, denied access to any legal process and have  subsequently "disappeared". All of those interviewed by Amnesty International  described being tortured or otherwise ill-treated."
  
 "The callous and calculated multiplicity of abuses is shocking. People  captured have been subjected to a range of abuses of human rights by a number of  governments acting in collusion, and all of this has been shrouded by secrecy  and deceit," said Ms Khan.
  
 "The report shows not just how arrest and extradition procedures have been  ignored, the ban on torture and other ill-treatment has been disregarded, but  also how aviation practices have been undermined: in essence the rule of law has  been put aside."
  
 Amnesty International cautioned that states that tolerate these flights  landing on their territory and companies that carry them out, may find  themselves complicit in serious human rights abuses.
  
 The organization called for the transfer of any detainee to other countries  to take place with proper safeguards, including judicial oversight, and the use  of official aircraft.
  
 "All governments must prevent, investigate and prosecute those responsible  for secret detention and rendition," declared Ms Khan.
  
 Amnesty International called on the aviation sector to take specific and  immediate action to ensure that aviation companies do not lease their aircraft  in circumstances in which they may be used in renditions. The onus is on  companies to ensure that they are aware of the end use of any aircraft they  lease or operate and that they do not facilitate human rights violations.
  
 Amnesty International called on governments to:
 Insist that any plane or helicopter used to carry out the missions of the  intelligence services be declared a 'state' flight, regardless of whether they  are carried out using civilian aircraft.
 Prohibit the use of airspace and airports for renditions and actively  investigate suspected rendition cases.
 Disclose the full extent of these practices and the fate of those whose  whereabouts are still unknown.
  
 Notes to editors
  
 Estimated numbers of rendition victims:
  The Egyptian prime minister noted in 2005 that the US has transferred some  60-70 detainees to Egypt alone, and a former CIA agent with experience in the region believes that  "hundreds" of detainees may have been sent by the US to prisons in Middle  Eastern countries.
The USA has acknowledged the capture of about 30 "high value"  detainees whose whereabouts remain unknown, and the CIA is reportedly  investigating some three dozen additional cases of  "erroneous rendition", in  which people were detained based on flawed evidence or confusion over names.
 See  also: USA: Human dignity denied: Torture and accountability in the "war on  terror" (AI Index: AMR 51/145/2004) 
http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maaeFWSabpy6SciLAxLb/   
   
 To obtain an embargoed copy of the report, contact Amnesty International  Press Office (see details below).
  
    
 All AI Documents on USA:
   
 Take Action!
 USA: “The best kept secret in the aviation industry”?
   
 The CIA rendition planes and where they have been:
   
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