Italian Judge Orders CIA Team Arrested over Kidnap

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Italy judge orders CIA team arrested over kidnap
Fri Jun 24, 2005 01:34 PM ET


By Emilio Parodi and Phil Stewart
MILAN/ROME (Reuters) - An Italian judge has ordered the arrest of 13 people linked to the CIA for "kidnapping" an Egyptian terrorism suspect in Milan and flying him to Egypt where he said he was tortured, judicial sources said on Friday.

"In the judge's order, it (the abduction) is clearly attributed to the CIA," a source said.

Confirming the arrest warrant without mentioning the U.S. intelligence agency, the prosecutors office said the 13 suspects were believed to be behind the abduction of imam Hassan Mustafa Osama Nasr, also known as Abu Omar, who was grabbed off a Milan street on Feb. 17, 2003 and stuffed into a white van.

Nasr was then taken to a U.S. air base in Aviano, Italy and flown to Egypt, stopping over on the way in Ramstein, Germany, to change planes, the prosecutors' statement said.

The judicial source cited the warrant, which has still not been made public, as saying a CIA agent known to Italian authorities coordinated the operation.

The source added there was no indication Italy had authorized the "illegal kidnapping."

A CIA spokesperson in Washington said: "We're not even not commenting. We're saying: if we have anything to say, we'll get back to you." The U.S. embassy in Rome declined comment.

The prosecutors office said it would request "judicial assistance" from U.S. and Egyptian authorities.

Another judicial source said: "We know some of the identities of these (suspects) with certainty, but with others we are not sure of their true identity."

Foreign intelligence officials believe Nasr had fought in Afghanistan and Bosnia before arriving in Italy in 1997 and obtaining political refugee status. When he disappeared, he was under investigation in Italy for suspected ties to terrorism, including recruiting militants for Iraq.

Italy laid charges against Nasr on Friday, formally ordering his arrest for terrorism, which paves the way for his possible extradition to Milan. But his current whereabouts are unknown.

TORTURE

Secret transfers of suspects to foreign states for interrogation are an acknowledged tool of the United States in its war on terrorism, but it denies charges that the practice -- known as rendition -- amounts to outsourcing torture.

President Bush said in March that the United States only delivers terrorism suspects to nations once it has obtained assurances they will not be tortured.

The Italian prosecutors office said Nasr appeared to have been subjected to abuse in Egyptian custody.

He was temporarily released in 2004 for medical reasons after apparently enduring "physical violence to get him to respond to questions by interrogators," it said in the statement.

Before he was arrested again in Egypt in May 2004, Nasr made two phone calls -- one to his wife and another to a religious leader in Milan named Mohamed Reda, in which he spoke of abuse.

"I still can't walk more than 200 meters (660 ft). I'm always seated. I have problems of incontinence, kidneys, high blood pressure," he said, according to a wire tap transcript in court documents obtained by Reuters on Friday.

Corriere della Sera said Italian investigators had identified the alleged kidnappers by tracing cell phone calls after the abduction, many of them to the Aviano base.

It was not immediately clear whether Nasr was still in Egyptian custody and Corriere said he has not been heard from since the telephone calls last year.

Last month another judge, Guido Salvini, said in a court document that "people belonging to foreign intelligence networks" had kidnapped Nasr and flown him out of Italy.

He added that the alleged kidnapping "undoubtedly constitutes a grave violation of Italian national sovereignty."

RS (Catalino) LaRue (RSLaRue), Friday, 24 June 2005 19:41 (twenty years ago)

whoa. it's like the '70s all over again!

kingfish (Kingfish), Friday, 24 June 2005 19:49 (twenty years ago)

I suppose we're going to start boycotting Italy now...

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 25 June 2005 15:19 (twenty years ago)

i wonder what will happen with this; i presume nothing, sadly. most of the articles i've read about this note that it's odd that this would happen in *italy*, whose prime minister is one of bush's few allies re. iraq. however i wonder how much autonomy the court that ordered these asserts had and if berlusconi had anything at all to do with this.

i think it's sort of a given that no cia agent will ever be punished, ever, for doing something s/he was asked to do by the cia. one of the perks of working for a superpower.

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Saturday, 25 June 2005 15:30 (twenty years ago)

(cue brad-pitt-movie scenario where lone agent finds that the agency has turned on him and he is marked for death etc.)

Amateur(ist) (Amateur(ist)), Saturday, 25 June 2005 15:31 (twenty years ago)

I don't know, this could be a big deal. The U.S. refusal to recognize any kind of international law at all is going to run into a buzzsaw at some point. And the Italians are still incredibly pissed off about their own intelligence agent being shot by U.S. troops in Iraq (for which no one was ever punished, right?). We're going to have a back-breaking straw at some point.

One thing we can count on is that this will be much bigger news -- and will be remembered for much longer -- outside the U.S. than domestically.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 25 June 2005 16:00 (twenty years ago)

(pardon all the metaphor mixing and saying "at some point" twice in the same graf. my kingdom for an editing function...)

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 25 June 2005 16:01 (twenty years ago)

gypsy, the US has sole inalienable rights to buzzsaw use and ownership. these CIA agents have rather run into an Italian floor-buffer.

Tracer Hand (tracerhand), Saturday, 25 June 2005 16:42 (twenty years ago)

So they're going to wax our ass?

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 25 June 2005 16:54 (twenty years ago)

and it's all connected!

...Secret transfers of suspects to foreign states for interrogation are an acknowledged tool of the United States in its war on terrorism, but it denies charges that the practice -- known as rendition -- amounts to outsourcing torture.

President Bush said in March that the United States only delivers terrorism suspects to nations once it has obtained assurances they will not be tortured.

The Italian prosecutors office said Nasr appeared to have been subjected to abuse in Egyptian custody.

He was temporarily released in 2004 for medical reasons after apparently enduring "physical violence to get him to respond to questions by interrogators," it said in the statement.

meanwhile, About fucking time: "US acknowledges torture at Guantanamo and Iraq, Afghanistan: UN source"

oh yeah, and this deserves another link

...I wrote to ask my Senators to support S 654, and my Representative to support HR 952. Since none of my elected representatives has signed on as a sponsor of these bills, I asked each of them to do that as well...

S 654 and HR 952 are two similar bills, the first in the Senate and the second in the House. They would ban extraordinary rendition: sending people to other countries where we know they might be tortured: countries like Uzbekistan, Syria, and Egypt....

kingfish (Kingfish), Saturday, 25 June 2005 17:18 (twenty years ago)

I'm not sure if anyone outside Canada had heard of Maher Arar. But he was a Syrian-born Canadian taken by U.S. officials during a changeover in NYC. He was then exported to Syria and tortured.

Right now there is an "Arar inquiry" going on to determine which Canadian officials did wrong by allowing it to happen. And while it's good that we get to the bottom of it, at our end, I have read little condemnation of the U.S.'s practice of rendition or any action to discuss the matter with American officials.

Thermo Thinwall (Thermo Thinwall), Saturday, 25 June 2005 17:47 (twenty years ago)

Arar has filed a lawsuit against the U.S. I don't know what the status of it is, but it'll be interesting to see if the U.S. settles to keep the whole thing out of court (thereby tacitly admitting its guilt) or if the Bushies will be stubborn enough to drag the thing out.

gypsy mothra (gypsy mothra), Saturday, 25 June 2005 18:12 (twenty years ago)

nine months pass...
http://web.amnesty.org/library/index/ENGAMR510512006

tmi, Tuesday, 4 April 2006 23:18 (twenty years ago)


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