EU Disquiet over 'Renditions' Grows
The Financial Times
Wednesday 14 December 2005
The German government warned Washington on Wednesday to heed European concerns over allegations of CIA prisons and extra-judicial abductions, or "renditions?, on the continent.
Frank-Walter Steinmeier, foreign minister, said he was worried Europe and the US were drawing different conclusions on the best means to fight international terrorism.
In an emergency parliamentary debate on the illegal abduction of a German citizen by the CIA, Mr. Steinmeier said Washington "appears to be increasingly aware that it cannot deal lightly with the concerns of its European partners?.
His comments came amid growing public disquiet in Europe over alleged CIA activities in Europe. Franco Frattini, the EU's commissioner for justice and home affairs, on Wednesday pledged his full support for an inquiry into whether the CIA maintained "secret prisons? in Europe.
Mr. Steinmeier said he was "worried? that Europe and the US were drawing different conclusions - on laws and, more seriously, on broader justice-related issues - regarding the international terrorism threat.
His comments were seen as an attempt to distance the new German government from the US administration on the issue of CIA activities in Europe. Mr. Steinmeier said German authorities had not known about, or been involved in, the abduction and imprisonment two years ago by the CIA of Khaled al-Masri, a German of Lebanese descent.
Mr. Frattini told members of the European parliament in Strasbourg that international agencies should forward satellite imagery and flight data to the investigation on the issue led by the Council of Europe, the 46-nation human rights organization.
The information, requested by Dick Marty, the Swiss politician heading the probe, is held by Eurocontrol, a European air navigation organization, and the European satellite agency.
However, Mr. Frattini did not endorse Mr. Marty's statement this week that it was "credible? the US broke the law by temporarily detaining prisoners in Europe and shipping them across borders.
Separately, Liberty, the British civil rights group, last night said it was prepared to launch legal action against the UK government over the issue of London's alleged complicity in rendition.
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