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CIA accused
of using Spanish airport for terror suspects
Foreign Desk Report
MADRID (Spain)—The National Court has received a prosecutor’s report on
allegations that the CIA used an airport on the Spanish island of
Mallorca for a program of covert transfers of terror suspects, court
officials said Monday. The chief prosecutor for the Balearic Islands,
which include Mallorca, submitted the 114-page report to the court in
July, after a four-month investigation prompted by articles in a
Mallorca newspaper, the court officials said. They spoke on condition of
anonymity because court rules bar them from giving their names.
The newspaper, Diario de Mallorca, said Spanish police have identified
three planes used by the CIA at the airport in Palma, the capital of the
Mediterranean island, in its “extraordinary rendition” program, in which
terror suspects were transferred to third countries without court
approval, subjecting them to possible ill-treatment. The office of the
prosecutor, Bartomeu Barcelo, declined to comment on the report on
Monday, as did police in Mallorca. The Spanish court officials said it
was not immediately clear if the National Court has begun or agreed to
undertake its own investigation.
Diario de Mallorca said more than a dozen CIA flights had used Palma
airport. It said that in one case, a CIA plane involved in the alleged
kidnapping of a German-born Lebanese national, Khaled al-Masri, in
Macedonia early last year had taken off from Palma airport en route to
Macedonia.
Al-Masri says he was abducted, flown to Afghanistan and interrogated for
suspected ties to al-Qaida. Weeks later, al-Masri has said, he was
turned over to officials he believes were from the United States who
flew him to a prison in Afghanistan — where he claims he was shackled,
beaten, injected with drugs and questioned persistently about his
alleged links with al-Qaida.
He says he staged a hunger strike and was released last May after being
flown to Albania. Italy and Germany are investigating alleged CIA
involvement in the alleged kidnapping of a suspected Muslim extremist.
In Italy, prosecutors are seeking the extradition of 22 purported CIA
operatives accused of kidnapping an Egyptian cleric, Osama Moustafa
Hassan Nasr, in 2003 in Milan. German prosecutors are probing the same
case on grounds that one of the CIA agents may have touched German soil
when the plane carrying the suspect to Egypt passed through Ramstein Air
Base.
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