The CPS has also decided that suspicions about Britain’s involvement in rendition to and torture
in Libya are serious enough to warrant
an immediate criminal investigation. In addition, there may be further criminal
investigations into other aspects of the rendition
scandal.
Liberty first
expressed concerns in November 2005 that the UK government may be complicit in alleged torture
practices if secret “torture flights,” carrying suspects to third countries
where they may face torture transited UK airports. The human rights
organisation has always insisted that an inquiry into the allegations must be
fair, independent and its findings presented openly and transparently.
When the Evidence Protocol for the
‘detainee inquiry’ was finally published in July 2011 – a year after the inquiry
was announced – it was clear that the crucial final word on whether material
could be made public rests not with a Judge but with the Cabinet Secretary, the
Government’s chief civil servant. A covering letter received by Liberty also
makes clear that the Government proposes that torture victims should not be able
to put questions to those allegedly complicit in their abuse - even by way of
their legal representatives. In light of this all the non-governmental
organisations involved – including Liberty – and the torture victims withdrew
their participation from the process.
Shami Chakrabarti, Director of
Liberty, said:
“We of course welcome the criminal
investigation into Britain’s suspected involvement with
torture under the Gaddafi regime. But the criminal law is not the only way of
correcting grave injustices in a great democracy. It is now even more important
that the victims, security agencies and wider public benefit from a full and
independent judicial inquiry into one of the worst scandals of recent memory.
The secretive and toothless Cabinet
Office process chaired by Sir Peter Gibson is an embarrassingly inadequate
response and the Government’s new Green Paper would shut down open justice
forever.”
The Government’s Justice and
Security Green Paper, published last October, proposes that ministers should be
able to initiate closed proceedings in civil claims where the Government claims
disclosure would harm the public interest. It would therefore allow the
Government to defend accusations of complicity in torture without revealing
information which may be crucial to a fair hearing for the victim and to the
public interest in media scrutiny of alleged abuses of
power.
Contact: Liberty press office on 020 7378 3656 or 07973 831128
NOTES TO
EDITORS
1. Liberty’s response
to the Justice and Security Green paper can be found here: http://www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk/pdfs/policy11/liberty-s-response-to-the-ministry-of-justice-consultation-justice-and-secur.pdf
2. For a copy of the protocol for the
Detainee Inquiry visit: http://www.detaineeinquiry.org.uk/key-documents/protocol
3. Section 134 of the Criminal Justice
Act 1988 makes torture an offence anywhere in the world. The offence may either
be committed by a public official or someone acting in an official capacity, or
by someone else acting at the instigation of or with the consent or acquiescence
of a public official or someone acting in an official capacity. It follows that
aiding, abetting, counselling or procuring torture anywhere in the world or
conspiring to do so are also offences under British law.
4. Timeline of Torture
allegations:
- The Guardian newspaper revealed on 6 December
and 12 September 2005 that airports in Biggin Hill, Birmingham, Bournemouth, Brize Norton, Farnborough,
Gatwick, Heathrow, Luton, RAF Mildenhall,
Northolt, and Stansted have allowed CIA or CIA-chartered jets to land
temporarily. These aircraft had flown into the UK
approximately 210 times since 2001.
- Liberty alerted the
then-Foreign Secretary Jack Straw in November 2005 of its fears that the
UK is in breach of domestic
and international law by allowing CIA “extraordinary rendition” flights to land
and re-fuel in Britain. A dossier of Liberty’s ongoing
correspondence with the Foreign and Commonwealth Office is available on
www.liberty-human-rights.org.uk
- On 30 November
2005, Liberty called on the Police Chief
Constables of Bedfordshire, Dorset, Essex, Hampshire, the Metropolitan Police,
the Ministry of Defence Police, Suffolk,
Sussex, Thames Valley, and West
Midlands to conduct an investigation into whether the airports in
their regions were being used to transport suspects to countries known to
practice torture. In response to Liberty’s request to the police, Greater
Manchester Police Chief Constable Michael Todd confirmed on 19 December 2005
that he would look into “extraordinary rendition” flights on behalf of the
Association of Chief Police Officers (ACPO.)
- On 26 May 2006, the
Parliamentary Joint Committee on Human Rights concluded that the Government was
not doing enough to investigate whether UK airports are being used by secret
CIA flights involved in the practice of extraordinary
rendition.
- On 7 June 2006 the
Council of Europe released preliminary findings concluding that CIA flights
carrying terror suspects likely to face torture have been given access to
UK airspace and
airports.
- On 26 June 2006 the
Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe (PACE) passed a resolution
calling on all member states, including the UK, to pressure the US into ending
rendition flights, closing secret prisons and changing their own laws and
practices to guarantee the rights of persons captured from, detained in or
transported through their states.
- In February 2007
the European Parliament’s temporary commission on extraordinary rendition
approved a report accusing EU states
of complicity with CIA rendition flights.
- On 21 February 2008, British
Foreign
Secretary David
Miliband admitted that two US
extraordinary rendition flights refuelled on Diego Garcia in 2002.
- In May 2008, in
order to assist his defence against terrorism charges in the US, Binyam Mohamed made an application to the
High Court requesting the UK
government to disclose documents provided to it by the US government which gave details of his treatment
by the US authorities. Mr Mohamed alleged
that he had been subjected to torture while in US custody, consisting of genital
mutilation, deprivation of sleep and food, being held in stress positions for
days at a time, and being forced to listen to loud music and screams of other
prisoners while locked in a pitch black cell, all while being forced to
implicate himself and others in terrorist plots against the
US.
- The High Court
ruled that Mr Mohamed was entitled to the documents because they concerned
wrongdoing by a third party in which the UK
government had been involved. Binyam Mohamed's treatment occurred at a time when
the UK intelligence services had been
involved in questioning him. The UK government then issued "public interest
immunity" (PII) certificates claiming that disclosure of the documents, and
seven paragraphs of the High Court's judgment which summarised them, would not
be in the public interest. Mr Mohamed challenged this assessment and the matter
was considered by the High Court.
- Binyam Mohamed
subsequently obtained the documents from the US authorities and charges against him in the
US were ultimately dropped. However
the UK government continued to resist
publication of the 7 paragraphs of the High Court's judgment because it claimed
that it would breach the diplomatic rule that intelligence provided by one
government to another should not be disclosed without the consent of the
government which provided it ("the control principle"). It was said that the
consequence of this was that the Bush administration would reduce its
co-operation with the UK intelligence
services.
- The High Court
accepted the UK government's concerns and decided
not to publish the seven paragraphs.
- Subsequently the
High Court agreed to reopen the case after it materialised that the Obama
administration may not adopt the same stance as the Bush administration had
done. The Court ruled that there was no proper basis for the UK government's assertion that the US
government would react in the way that was claimed. It therefore ruled that the
seven paragraphs should be published. The UK
government appealed this decision and as a result the publication of the seven
paragraphs was postponed pending the appeal.
- Meanwhile a
US court ruled in an
application for habeas corpus by a Guantanamo Bay detainee that Binyam Mohamed had been
treated in the way he alleged (i.e. as summarised in the seven paragraphs).
Despite this the UK government continued to argue that
the seven paragraphs should not be published. The Court of Appeal decided on 10
February 2010 that the seven paragraphs should be published.
- On receiving the
embargoed draft judgment of the Court of Appeal, the government’s counsel made
the unusual request in a letter to the Master of the Rolls to delete one
paragraph of his judgment. On 26 February 2010 after receiving further
submissions on the issue, the Master of the Rolls rejected the government’s
request and published the disputed paragraph with only minor
alterations.
- In separate
litigation, Binyam Mohamed and a number of other former Guantanamo Bay detainees brought civil claims for damages against
the UK government for
involvement in their ill treatment and unlawful detention by the US
authorities. The government asked the High Court to adopt a “closed material
procedure” which would involve the claimants and their lawyers being excluded
from the hearing of the case, and the issuing of a “closed judgment” which they
would not be entitled to see.
- On 18 November 2009
the High Court ruled that it had the power to adopt such a procedure. The
claimants appealed that ruling.
- On 4 May 2010 the
Court of Appeal ruled that Court would not adopt the ‘secret
procedure’.
- On 6 July 2010 The
Prime Minister announced an inquiry, to be chaired by Sir Peter Gibson, into
allegations of British complicity in torture. A former senior judge, Sir Peter
Gibson’s also has a continuing role as Intelligence Services Commissioner which
he has held since 2006 (not due to end until 2012).
- On 16 November 2010
the Government announced the settlement of civil claims by former Guantanamo
detainees.
- 24 – 27 January
2011, the Supreme Court heard the Government’s appeal against the Court of
Appeal ruling on closed hearings.
- In July 2011, the
Supreme Court upheld the Court of Appeal ruling on closed hearings. Lord Dyson,
giving the lead judgment, said that the introduction of a closed material
procedure in ordinary civil claims would involve “an inroad into a fundamental
common law right”.