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To: Wharf Rat who wrote (70141)6/7/2006 10:17:25 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 362497
 
"He listed 14 European countries — Britain, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Bosnia, Macedonia, Turkey, Spain, Cyprus, Ireland, Greece, Portugal, Romania and Poland — as being complicit in "unlawful inter-state transfers" of people."

Probe of CIA prisons implicates EU nations
By JAN SLIVA,
Associated Press Writer



Fourteen European nations colluded with U.S. intelligence in a "spider's web" of secret flights and detention centers that violated international human rights law, the head of an investigation into alleged CIA clandestine prisons said Wednesday.

Swiss senator Dick Marty said the nations aided the movement of 17 detainees who said they had been abducted by U.S. agents and secretly transferred to detention centers around the world.

Some said they were transferred to the U.S. detention center at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba and others to alleged secret facilities in countries including Poland, Romania, Egypt and Jordan. Some said they were mistreated or tortured.

"I have chosen to adopt the metaphor of a global spider's web, a web that has been spun out incrementally over several years using tactics and techniques that had to be developed in response to new threats of war," Marty said.

Marty provided no direct evidence but charged that most European governments "did not seem particularly eager to establish" the facts.

"Even if proof, in the classical meaning of the term, is not as yet available, a number of coherent and converging elements indicate that such secret detention centers did indeed exist in Europe," he wrote, saying this warranted further investigation.

Marty relied mostly on flight logs provided by the European Union's air traffic agency, Eurocontrol, witness statements gathered from people who said they had been abducted by U.S. intelligence agents and judicial and parliamentary inquiries in various countries.

He concluded that several countries let the CIA abduct their residents, while others allowed the agency to use their airspace or turned a blind eye to questionable foreign intelligence activities on their territory.

He listed 14 European countries — Britain, Germany, Italy, Sweden, Bosnia, Macedonia, Turkey, Spain, Cyprus, Ireland, Greece, Portugal, Romania and Poland — as being complicit in "unlawful inter-state transfers" of people.

Some, including Sweden and Bosnia, already have admitted some involvement.

Marty put airports in Timisoara, Romania, and Szymany, Poland, in a "detainee transfer/drop-off point" category, together with eight airports outside Europe.

The 67-page report, addressed to the 46 Council of Europe member states, will likely be used by the human rights watchdog to put pressure on the countries implicated to investigate.

Marty said Romania and Poland were part of what he called a "renditions circuit."

He said one plane arrived in Timisoara, Romania, from Kabul, Afghanistan, on the night of Jan. 25, 2004, after having picked up Khaled El-Masri, a German who said he had been abducted by foreign intelligence agents in Skopje, Macedonia, and taken to the Afghan capital.

Marty said the plane with the crew that he said accompanied El-Masri stayed in Timisoara for 72 minutes before leaving for Spain.

"The most likely hypothesis of the purpose of this flight was to transport one or several detainees from Kabul to Romania," Marty said in the report, without elaborating.

Similarly, Marty said he believed the Szymany airport in northeastern Poland was used for a rendition flight in September 2003.

Officials in Romania and Poland denied the allegations Wednesday.

A parallel investigation by the European Parliament has said data show there have been more than 1,000 clandestine CIA flights stopping on European territory since the Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Officials said it was not clear if or how many detainees were on board, and have not shed any light on allegations of CIA secret prisons.

Allegations that CIA agents shipped prisoners through European airports to secret detention centers, including compounds in eastern Europe, were first reported in November by The Washington Post.

Poland's prime minister denied Wednesday that CIA planes carrying terror suspects ever stopped or dropped off prisoners in Poland.

"This is slander and it's not based on any facts," Prime Minister Kazimierz Marcinkiewicz told reporters in Warsaw.

Former Polish President Aleksander Kwasniewski admitted he had heard of a few cases of secret landings by CIA planes in Poland, saying it was "natural" in the global fight against terrorism.

Romeo Raicu, head of Romania's parliamentary committee overseeing foreign intelligence services, told The Associated Press: "There is no evidence there were such detention bases in Romania."

He noted that agreements with the U.S. and NATO allow their aircraft to land in Romania and to fly over Romanian territory.

"The responsibility for what those planes transport is not Romania's responsibility," he said.

Britain said it had granted two of four U.S. rendition requests.

The first concerned Mohammed Rashid, a man later sentenced in the United States to seven years in prison in connection with the bombing of a Pan Am flight in 1982.

A second was to transport Mohamed Rashed Daoud al-Owhali via London's Gatwick airport. He was sentenced to life in 2001 for his role in the 1998 bombing of the U.S. Embassy in Nairobi.

"I have to say, the Council of Europe report has absolutely nothing new in it," British Prime Minister Tony Blair said.

Clandestine prisons and secret flights via or from Europe to countries where suspects could face torture would breach the continent's human rights treaties, including the European Convention on Human Rights.

The Council of Europe has no power to punish countries for breaching the treaty other than terminating their membership in the organization. Based on irrefutable evidence, the European Union might be able to suspend the voting rights of a country found to have breached the convention.



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (70141)6/7/2006 10:23:59 AM
From: T L Comiskey  Respond to of 362497
 
Marshmallow time..
in
The Chocolate City

Census outlines face of today's New Orleans
By Anne Rochell Konigsmark, USA TODAY
Wed Jun 7,

Hurricane Katrina drained the New Orleans metropolitan area of almost 40% of its residents and left the region with a whiter, wealthier and older population, according to the first Census Bureau estimates since the devastating flooding.

The special survey released today shows the New Orleans area, made up of seven parishes, became 73% white in the months after the hurricane Aug. 29, up from about 59% before the storm. The black population dropped from about 37% to 22%. The median age increased by about four years, and the median annual income rose from $39,793 to $43,447.

"This confirms what some people thought: There was a selective out-migration of poorer minorities," says William Frey, a demographer with the Brookings Institution.

The survey provides only estimates and is not official. It looked at counties and parishes in four states affected most by Hurricanes Katrina and Rita.

In New Orleans, the Census report confirms what local officials have been saying for months: Katrina did more damage in lower-income, black neighborhoods, which has made it more difficult for those residents to return.

Katrina and the subsequent breaching of the levee system flooded 80% of New Orleans and swamped St. Bernard and Plaquemines parishes to the east. Areas that did not flood are repopulating, but vast stretches of the metro area remain virtually empty. The Louisiana Recovery Authority estimates about 200,000 homes were destroyed.

The city of New Orleans lost about 64% of its residents after the storm, going from 437,000 in July to 158,000 in January, the Census Bureau says.

New Orleans demographer Greg Rigamer says the city's population has risen to 200,000 since the Census survey. Like the wider seven-parish metro area, New Orleans has lost more blacks than whites, Rigamer says. The May 20 mayoral election showed the city to be about 55% black, Rigamer says, down from two-thirds.

Lisa Blumerman of the Census Bureau says the demographic changes include an increase in requests for food stamps "across the board" in storm-affected areas. "Louisiana alone saw a 14% increase," she says. "That's incredible growth and shows an increased need for government help."

Along the Mississippi Gulf Coast, where Katrina hit directly and swept away miles of coastal homes, the population has dwindled 17%, from 363,000 to 303,000. The black population rose from 17% to 28%, while the white population declined from 80% to 71%.

Many hurricane evacuees are living in Houston, according to the survey. Harris County, which includes Houston, has an additional 90,000 people, or a 2.5% increase. Baton Rouge, about 80 miles east of New Orleans, saw its population increase by 17,000 people, or 4%.



To: Wharf Rat who wrote (70141)6/7/2006 10:24:54 AM
From: CalculatedRisk  Read Replies (1) | Respond to of 362497
 
All history is 'revisionist'
A Florida law banning relativism in classes ignores reality and 75 years of academic tradition.
By Jonathan Zimmerman
June 7, 2006
latimes.com

MY COMMENT: The Bushies are scary. Now they are telling us their view of history is the only correct view.

JUST WHEN YOU thought it was safe to study American history again … the revisionists are back!

You know, those relativists who distort or simply fabricate the past to make it fit their present-day biases. For instance, shortly after the U.S. invaded Iraq in 2003, President Bush attacked "revisionist historians" who questioned his justifications for using force against Saddam Hussein. He did it again on Veterans Day in 2005. "It is deeply irresponsible," he declared, "to rewrite the history of how the war began."

And just last week, in an unprecedented move, the president's brother approved a law barring revisionist history in Florida public schools. "The history of the United States shall be taught as genuine history and shall not follow the revisionist or postmodernist viewpoints of relative truth," declares Florida's Education Omnibus Bill, signed by Gov. Jeb Bush. "American history shall be viewed as factual, not as constructed."

Ironically, the Florida law is itself revisionist history. Once upon a time, it theorizes, history — especially about the founding of the country — was based on facts. But sometime during the 1960s, all that changed. American historians supposedly started embracing newfangled theories of moral relativism and French postmodernism, abandoning their traditional quest for facts, truth and certainty.

The result was a flurry of new interpretations, casting doubt on the entire past as we had previously understood it. Because one theory was as good as another, then nothing could be true or false. God, nation, family and school: It was all up for grabs.

There's just one problem with this history-of-our-history: It's wrong.

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