November 3, 2005

NATIONS DENY EXISTENCE OF CIA PRISONS

Nov 3, 10:11 AM (ET)

BRUSSELS, Belgium (AP) - European Union officials said Thursday they would investigate a report that the CIA set up secret jails in Eastern Europe to interrogate top al-Qaida suspects. The international Red Cross also said it asked the United States to let a representative visit detainees if such a facility exists. At least 10 nations denied Thursday that the prisons were in their territory.

"I repeat: We do not have CIA bases in Romania," the country's prime minister, Calin Popescu Tariceanu, said.

In Poland, an aide to President Aleksander Kwasniewski said authorities there had "no information" of such facilities existing there.

Bulgaria, Hungary, Latvia, Georgia and Armenia also issued denials.

The governments of the EU's 25 members nations will be questioned informally about the allegations, EU spokesman Friso Roscam Abbing said.

He said officials from the European Commission's justice and interior affairs departments would contact their counterparts across the EU to assess the truth of the report in Wednesday's editions of The Washington Post.

"We have to find out what is exactly happening," Roscam Abbing said. "We have all heard about this."

He said such prisons could violate EU human rights laws and other European human rights conventions. The commission is responsible for ensuring that EU rules are followed.

"As far as the treatment of prisoners is concerned ... it is clear that all 25 member states having signed up to European Convention on Human Rights, and to the International Convention Against Torture, are due to respect and fully implement the obligations deriving from those treaties," Roscam Abbing told reporters.

He cautioned, however, that the EU head office could not take action against member states if they violated human rights codes.

The International Committee of the Red Cross said it asked the United States about the report and to let a representative visit any prisoners if the facility exists.

"We have asked the U.S. authorities to inform us about the detention of these persons, and to give access to ICRC delegates to persons held in undisclosed places of detention," said Antonella Notari, the ICRC's chief spokeswoman. "We think this would be a coherent continuation of our current detention work in U.S. places of detention."

The ICRC, which has had exclusive rights to visit terror suspects detained at a U.S. military base in Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, and elsewhere, has long been concerned about reports that U.S. officials were hiding some detainees from ICRC delegates.

Separately, Europe's top human rights organization, the Council of Europe, said it too would investigate whether the claims were true.

On Wednesday, U.S. National Security Adviser Stephen Hadley would not confirm or deny the existence of a secret, Soviet-era compound in Eastern Europe as described by the Post. The story said the facility was part of a covert prison system set up nearly four years ago that at various times has included sites in eight countries, some of them EU member states.

But Hadley said President Bush's directive banning the torture of terror suspects applies to all prisoners - even if held in a secret prison.

The story quoted current and former intelligence officials and diplomats.

Matjaz Gruden, spokesman for Council of Europe chairman Terry Davis, said secret detentions are a breach of the European Convention on Human Rights. The treaty is binding on the council's 46 members, many of which belong to the EU.

In September, the council sent a representative to the United States to urge the American government to cease the practice.

"If this was indeed happening on our territory, it would be a violation of Europe's human rights treaty," Gruden said.

The U.N. special investigator on torture, Manfred Nowak, said he had "not received any direct allegation or indirect information concerning any CIA place of detention in Eastern Europe - in other parts of the world, but not in Eastern Europe."

Speaking by telephone from Austria, Nowak said he was "not investigating this now." He added, however, that U.N. investigators still were seeking "access to all places of detention of suspected terrorists held by the U.S. authorities outside its territory."

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Associated Press reporter Bradley S. Klapper in Geneva contributed to this report.

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