U.S.-Held Prisoners Transferred Abroad Subjected to Torture
/Despite repeated denials from
President Bush and others in his administration that the U.S.
government does not engage in torture or hand over prisoners to nations
that do, a number of eyewitness accounts and press reports contradict
those White House assertions. After the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks on New
York City and Washington, the Bush administration adopted a policy
called "extraordinary rendition" that permitted the transfer of a small
number of terrorist suspects to nations that employed brutal
interrogation methods illegal in the U.S. In recent years, the
government's "rendition" policy has greatly expanded, with estimates
placing the number of U.S.-held prisoners transferred to nations
employing torture at 150. Those who have been subject to the policy
include Maher Arar, a Canadian citizen who was detained in New York
City and then sent to Syria, where he suffered months of torture before
being released without charge. Another prisoner, Mamdouh Habib, accused
of training several of the 9/11 hijackers, was held in the U.S.-run
Guantanamo Bay, Cuba detention facility and later transferred to Egypt
where he claims he was beaten and burned. A piece in the Feb. 8th
edition of the New Yorker magazine by Jane Mayer, titled, "Outsourcing
Torture," details the rendition program and some of the allegations
made against the Bush administration. Between The Lines' Scott Harris
spoke with Michael Ratner, president of the Center for Constitutional
Rights and a principal attorney for prisoners being held at the
Guantanamo U.S. Naval Base. Ratner expresses his grave concern about
the rendition policy and the message sent to the world by the recent
Senate confirmation of Alberto Gonzalez as the Bush administration's
new Attorney General. [more]