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    UK spies won't face criminal charges for torture

    LONDON (AP) — Britain's spy agencies will face a criminal inquiry into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi's regime led to the torture or rendition of two Libyan men and their families, authorities announced Thursday.

    A criminal investigation was launched in 2008 when a former Guantanamo Bay detainee alleged that intelligence agencies were complicit in his torture. The inquiry later expanded to include claims by two Libyans who accused intelligence agents of sharing sensitive information with Gadhafi's regime.

    "We want to get to the bottom of this — not just on grounds of justice or ethical considerations, but because this whole saga has threatened to make Britain less safe," said Conservative lawmaker Andrew Tyrie who chairs a special committee on the practice of extraordinary rendition.

    Tripoli's military council commander Abdel-Hakim Belhaj, a former fighter in the Libyan Islamic Fighting Group which had opposed Gadhafi, claims both British and United States intelligence may have played a role in his 2004 detention in Thailand's capital Bangkok and transfer to Tripoli.

    Documents uncovered during the fall of Tripoli disclosed the close working ties between Gadhafi's spies and Western intelligence officials.

    Sami al-Saadi, another Libyan who had been opposed to Gadhafi, also claims Britain's foreign spy agency, MI6, played a role in his rendition.

    The New York-based Human Rights Watch found a cache of documents in the abandoned office of Gadhafi's former intelligence chief, Moussa Koussa, after the fall of the regime. Among them was a fax the CIA sent to Koussa in March 2004, which purportedly showed that the agency would support MI6 and Gadhafi in seeking Saadi's rendition.

    Two days after the fax, former British Prime Minister Tony Blair flew to Tripoli to meet Gaddafi. The two were photographed embracing and several deals were announced, including a multimillion pound agreement for a gas exploration contract with Shell, the Anglo-Dutch oil giant.

    Saadi, his wife and four children were rendered days later from Hong Kong to Libya where they were separated. Saadi claims he was tortured during his interrogations.

    It is not immediately clear whether Blair could be among those to face questioning from police in the upcoming inquiry.

    MI6 chief John Sawers said Thursday it was in the agency's interest to deal with the new allegations "as swiftly as possible so we can draw a line under them and focus on the crucial work we now face in the future."

    While British intelligence agents will face new questions over the Libyans' claims, prosecutors and police said Thursday there was insufficient evidence to prove that agents were complicit in the alleged torture or mistreatment of former Guantanamo detainees.

    The case that prompted the initial investigation was that of former Guantanamo detainee Binyam Mohamed.

    Mohamed, an Ethiopian who moved to Britain as a teenager and was initially held in Pakistan, says he was sent by the U.S. to Morocco where he was interrogated and brutally tortured. He alleges that he told an MI5 officer of his mistreatment in 2002.

    Keir Starmer, Director of Public Prosecutions, said there was evidence that intelligence agents provided information to the US authorities about Mohamed and also supplied questions for them. But, he said, there was "insufficient evidence to prove to the standard required in a criminal court" that any spies provided information when they knew he was being tortured, or suspected he was at risk.

    Mohamed said Thursday he hadn't expected British spies to be charged, but that new evidence may eventually emerge that would reopen cases.

    "If there is any further and wider criminal investigation ... I believe it would be completely impossible to decide that there has not been a pattern of massive complicity by UK bodies in criminality at the highest levels directed at other Muslim prisoners," Mohamed said. "My experience was not isolated; it was part of a pattern."

    Eliza Manningham-Buller, a former head of MI5, has said she believes the U.S. deliberately misled its allies over its handling of detainees during the so-called war on terror.

    In a separate allegation of complicity from a former detainee, investigators also say they failed to find sufficient evidence — mostly because they lacked access to witnesses and the detainee who had been held by U.S. authorities at the Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.

    Some 3,000 terror suspects continue to be held at the secretive detention facility where detainees lack access to lawyers. Human rights organizations have repeatedly criticized U.S. authorities for a lack of transparency and legal protection for the detainees.

    "One thing you read very clearly in those materials is that it is not that there wasn't torture, it is not that the British weren't involved, it is that there are witnesses who are not available to put their part," said Clive Stafford Smith, a lawyer with the legal charity Reprieve who represents some of the alleged victims of torture and rendition.

    Most of the torture allegations came from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation.

    British agents were accused of passing on information about detainees but not of direct abuse.

    Britain has already made payouts to 16 former detainees at Guantanamo. Among those alleged to have been part of the settlements were Mohamed, Bishar Al Rawi, Jamil El Banna, Richard Belmar, Omar Deghayes, Moazzam Begg and Martin Mubanga

    British prosecutors and police said that while there was insufficient evidence to bring criminal charges now, cases could be reopened if new evidence emerges.

    A separate government inquiry into Britain's role in the so-called war on terror is expected to begin later this year.

     

    10 comments

    • Britannia  •  Hope Valley, United Kingdom  •  4 mths ago
      These days its fashionable to pretend how far above such things we are, and surely no one sane likes to think of people causing pain to other people, but that swings both ways. It needs to be remembered the attacks on Embassies, military personel and of course the massive attacks on September 11th.
      What gets to me about all of this...is this. The attack and subsequent invasion of Afghanistan by the allied forces of Britain and the USA can have come as no surprise to anyone at all. It was warned of for months in advance of the strike, that if the Taliban didn't hand over Al Qaeda, they were coming in to get them.
      Since the very name of the event was War on Terror, and the object of the exercise was to get in there, get rid of the training camps training foreign people in the art of terror attacks on the west, since it was known terror cells trained by Al Qaeda, were present in Britain and after 9/11, clearly in America and other countries as well, then obviously the people they were looking for, weren't going to be exclusively Afghan. Assuming that most of them were in no way remedial wouldn't it have made sense to ANY of the foreign people in Afghanistan, to get out? And since they didn't, wouldn't it have at least appeared strange and suspicious that there they were still there??.
      Now on to questioning, if we ask someone a question, and they deny knowledge, is that it? Do we take them at their word and allow them to leave?
      Since we were allied with the USA, how can anyone consider it in the remotest bit strange or unethical, that we should share intelligence?
      I just don't know how people expect for these things to be conducted.
      The only thing I DO know is, if one of those people had been released and gone on to cause death and destruction on the streets of our countries, we would be wanting the professional heads of the idiots that let them go.
      • Jim Page 4 mths ago
        The problem is that most people have not been at war. They only know what is shown on TV and that's all sanitized of the basic nastiness of it. Polite war is a fiction. People get hurt. 'Nuff said.
      • Jackin 4 mths ago
        get your facts straight. it was just short of 1 month after 9-11 that we invaded Afghanistan, not months as you say. an actually to be succinct, the Taliban was given about 2 weeks before the invasion to hand over Bin Laden. It took us 10 years to get him, what makes you think the Taliban could have gotten Bin Laden and serve him up to the US in 2 weeks!!!
      • Britannia 4 mths ago
        Jacklin......... I admit it was weeks and not months but isn't it somewhat disingenuous of you to pretend to believe that the poor Taliban were frantically searching for Bin Laden ........and were wrongly attacked??.
        You can't possibly be naive enough to think that they didn't know that there were training camps, training terrorists up there?? Perhaps you think that the Taliban were imagining it was a Boy Scout jamboree that Bin Laden was running in the mountains?? That is might have been pure coincidence that some of the operatives on 9/11 had been there and all had links there??
    • The shortanator  •  Cicero, Illinois  •  4 mths ago
      Who ever said War was a tea party!!!
    • Annoynous  •  4 mths ago
      American government believes in torturing now ever since Cheney and Bush took office. Obama says he is against it but really isn't since he does nothing. In fact, he signed NDAA on December 31st, 2011 that makes it easier.
      • Frank 4 mths ago
        I think we should just quit torturing them and just hose them down in pig blood, chop off their heads and post it on the internet like they did to us for so long. Would that make everyone happy?
    • Max Fubar  •  4 mths ago
      Criminal go free once more.
    • Marc  •  Escondido, California  •  4 mths ago
      I'm sure that it has saved lives, but I sure dislike the whole torture idea. And if it were just military casualties, I'd denounce it. But these pigs will kill innocent children and other innocent non-combatants. There is no honor in that. As a retired Marine, I say they reap what they sow. Let God choose to forgive them. We're here to save lives and protect America's interests.
    • Alkoholic  •  4 mths ago
      Looks like the British politicians are just as big #$%$ as their American counterparts.
      • Muffled_miss 4 mths ago
        Not really... at tleast they're admitting that there were crimes comitted and making reparations. I don't see that happeng in the US...
      • Marc 4 mths ago
        Just like your mother.
    • השואה לעולם לא עוד  •  New York, New York  •  4 mths ago
      Activist cheered when innocent people, including children were being murdered, raped, and utterly destroyed by their "Palestinian/Hamas" friends. It's always "aid" to the murdering #$%$ but none to their victims. I laugh each time the leftist get slammed by their "former" friends. Egypt is falling headlong into civil war. The NTC of Libya is going to be wiped off the map in civil war in Libya as there are 120 various tribes that have been harmed or one of their members butchered by NATO allies and "the democracy" thugs. It was all a ruse to give power to Islamist and it's blowing up in their faces. Mew about some "aid" to the victims of the Muslim Brotherhood and the Al-Qaeda backed NTC of Libya?
    • JD  •  4 mths ago
      HANG the "intelligence" operatives for their crimes........
    • nefrin  •  4 mths ago
      Whats so different , this is their JOB to do those things, Thats It.
    • EDWIN  •  4 mths ago
      Bush and Cheney are BRAGGING about their role in torture of prisoners and they have net been charges with crimes against humanity.

      Why shouldn't the spies be given a pass?

      In the end they will all be judged by a higher court.
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