A refugee said "I cannot go back to my country because of the following points: 1. Imprisonment and Persecution 2. Torture and punishment 3. Electric torture 4. Beating with the stick on the feet (corporal punishment) 5. threatening me to be killed 6. Lack of human rights organizations which can lobby against human rights violation in the country. 7. Threatening to abuse my family members. 8. Demolition of my house. Due to all that I can’t go back".

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Apr 25, 2008

CIA Rendition Plane N71PG at Shannon 3 Dec 07

CIA Rendition Plane N71PG at Shannon 3 Dec 07



CIA rendition plane N71PG back in Shannon again Posted March 25th, 2008 by webmasterOn 20-Mar-2008, a Learjet LJ35/W was refuelled at Shannon airport and took off for Gander, Newfoundland at about 08:25AM GMT.
Its registration number is N71PG.The report in today's Irish Times by Jamie Smyth reads as follows:"Ireland criticised over 'rendition' questionnaireEU: THE EUROPEAN Commission has criticised Ireland and 22 other states for not responding to an inquiry about anti-terrorism policy, which it set up in the wake of the rendition flights controversy, writes JAMIE SMYTH in BrusselsJust Finland, Luxembourg, Poland and Spain have replied to a detailed questionnaire sent by the EU executive to governments last year with a deadline of March 15th. Governments were asked to involve "all relevant national bodies and departments including those in charge of protection of human rights", so that Brussels could put together a full picture of EU states' anti-terrorism activities.The questionnaire asked a range of questions, including what safeguards each state has in place to ensure secret service personnel are responsible to parliaments. The commission said yesterday that none of the EU states that had failed to respond to the questionnaire had informed Brussels why they chose to ignore it."We will take stock after Easter and then send a reminder to those who have not replied yet," said a spokesman for justice commissioner Franco Frattini yesterday, who acknowledged that the executive has no power to force EU states to comply.The inquiry is the commission's first real response to the controversy sparked by the discovery that the CIA had secretly transported terrorist suspects without trial out of Europe, often to face torture. It was set up following publication of a European Parliament report into CIA activities, which concluded that the US agency had operated more than 1,200 flights throughout Europe. It also criticised 14 EU states, including Ireland, for failing to deal properly with rendition."Its [ the inquiry's] purpose is to acquire factual and concrete information on the application of member states' anti-terrorism measures, their effectiveness and compliance with fundamental rights," said the commission spokesman. "This information will help us to identify possible difficulties and needs where necessary of EU action."Fine Gael TD Simon Coveney, who followed the rendition issue when he was an MEP, said the Government's failure to reply to the inquiry was "unacceptable"."The Government needs to be seen like all the other countries questioned in the European Parliament report about their role in rendition to fully co-operate with any questions the commission have," he said. "We shouldn't give the impression we have something to hide."A spokeswoman for the Department of Justice said that the Government's response to the questionnaire had been forwarded to Ireland's embassy in Brussels yesterday for transmission to the commission. "The questionnaire does not include reference to 'CIA activities in Europe', extraordinary rendition, or any other related matters," added the spokeswoman."MEP Coveney and his Fine Gael colleagues fully support the US military and CIA use of Shannon airport, and have advocated the abondonment of Irish nuetrality. Their protestations on the issue of rendition should there be taken with scepticism.There will be a peace vigil at Shannon airport on Easter Sunday 23 March from 5pm to 6pm, organised by Amnesty. Please show your solidarity for one million Iraqi dead and thousands of tortured prisoners, on Sunday, and everyday.
Source: http://www.irishantiwar.org/

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