Terror Suspect Alleges Torture
Detainee Says U.S. Sent Him to Egypt Before Guantanamo
By Dana Priest and Dan Eggen
Washington Post Staff Writers
Thursday, January 6, 2005; Page A01

U.S. authorities in late 2001 forcibly transferred an Australian
citizen to Egypt, where, he alleges, he was tortured for six months
before being flown to the U.S. military prison at Guantanamo Bay,
Cuba, according to court papers made public yesterday in a petition
seeking to halt U.S. plans to return him to Egypt.

Egyptian-born Mamdouh Habib, who was detained in Pakistan in October
2001 as a suspected al Qaeda trainer, alleges that while under
Egyptian detention he was hung by his arms from hooks, repeatedly
shocked, nearly drowned and brutally beaten, and he contends that U.S.
and international law prohibits sending him back.

Habib's case is only the second to describe a secret practice called
"rendition," under which the CIA has sent suspected terrorists to be
interrogated in countries where torture has been well documented. It
is unclear which U.S. agency transferred Habib to Egypt.

Habib's is the first case to challenge the legality of the practice
and could have implications for U.S. plans to send large numbers of
Guantanamo Bay detainees to Egypt, Yemen, Saudi Arabia and other
countries with poor human rights records.

The CIA has acknowledged that it conducts renditions, but the agency
and Bush administration officials who have publicly addressed the
matter say they never intend for the captives to be tortured and, in
fact, seek pledges from foreign governments that they will treat the
captives humanely.

A Justice Department spokesman declined to comment on Habib's
allegations, which were filed in November but made public only
yesterday after a judge ruled that his petition contained no
classified information. The department has not addressed the
allegation that he was sent to Egypt.

An Egyptian official reached last night said he could not comment on
Habib's allegations but added: "Accusations that we are torturing
people tend to be mythology."

The authority under which renditions and other forcible transfers may
be legally performed is reportedly summarized in a March 13, 2002,
memo titled "The President's Power as Commander in Chief to Transfer
Captive Terrorists to the Control and Custody of Foreign Nations."
Knowledgeable U.S. officials said White House counsel Alberto R.
Gonzales participated in its production.

The administration has refused a congressional request to make it
public. But it is referred to in an August 2002 Justice Department
opinion -- which Gonzales asked for and helped draft -- defining
torture in a narrow way and concluding that the president could
legally permit torture in fighting terrorism.

When the August memo became public, Bush repudiated it, and last week
the Justice Department replaced it with a broader interpretation of
the U.N. Convention Against Torture, which prohibits the practice
under all circumstances. The August memo is expected to figure
prominently in today's confirmation hearing for Gonzales, Bush's
nominee to run the Justice Department as attorney general.

In a statement he planned to read at his hearing, made public
yesterday, Gonzales said he would combat terrorism "in a manner
consistent with our nation's values and applicable law, including our
treaty obligations."

Also yesterday, the American Civil Liberties Union released new
documents showing that 26 FBI agents reported witnessing mistreatment
of Guantanamo Bay detainees, indicating a far broader pattern of
alleged abuse there than reported previously.

The records, obtained in an ongoing ACLU lawsuit, also show that the
FBI's senior lawyer determined that 17 of the incidents were
"DOD-approved interrogation techniques" and did not require further
investigation. The FBI did not participate in any of the interviews
directly, according to the documents.

The new ACLU documents detail abuses seen by FBI personnel serving in
Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay, including incidents in which
military interrogators grabbed prisoners' genitals, bent back their
fingers and, in one case, placed duct tape over a prisoner's mouth for
reciting the Koran.

In late 2002, an FBI agent recounted that one detainee at Guantanamo
Bay had been subjected to "intense isolation" for more than three
months and that his cell was constantly flooded with light. The agent
reported that "the detainee was evidencing behavior consistent with
extreme psychological trauma," including hearing voices, crouching in
a corner for hours and talking to imaginary people.

According to the e-mails, military interrogators at Guantanamo Bay
tried to hide some of their activities from FBI agents, including
having a female interrogator rub lotion on a prisoner during Ramadan
-- a highly offensive tactic to an observant Muslim man.

Habib was taken to the Guantanamo Bay prison in May 2002.

Three Britons released from the prison -- Rhuhel Ahmed, Asif Iqbal and
Shafiq Rasul -- have said Habib was in "catastrophic shape" when he
arrived. Most of his fingernails were missing, and while sleeping he
regularly bled from his nose, mouth and ears but U.S. officials denied
him treatment, they said.

Habib's attorney, Joseph Margulies, said Habib had moved to Australia
in the 1980s but eventually decided to move his family to Pakistan. He
was there in late 2001 looking for a house and school for his
children, Margulies said. U.S. officials accuse Habib of training and
raising money for al Qaeda, and say he had advance knowledge of the
Sept. 11, 2001, attacks. Australian media have reported that
authorities in that country cleared him of having terrorist
connections in 2001 and have quoted his Australian attorney as saying
he was tortured in Egypt.

On Oct. 5, 2001, Pakistani authorities seized Habib, and over three
weeks, he asserts in a memorandum filed in U.S. District Court in the
District of Columbia, three Americans interrogated him.

The petition says he was taken to an airfield where, during a
struggle, he was beaten by several people who spoke American-accented
English. The men cut off his clothes, one placed a foot on his neck
"and posed while another took pictures," the document says.

He was then flown to Egypt, it alleges, and spent six months in
custody in a barren, 6-foot-by-8-foot cell, where he slept on the
concrete floor with one blanket. During interrogations, Habib was
"sometimes suspended from hooks on the wall" and repeatedly kicked,
punched, beaten with a stick, rammed with an electric cattle prod and
doused with cold water when he fell asleep, the petition says.

He was suspended from hooks, with his is feet resting on the side of a
large cylindrical drum attached to wires and a battery, the document
says. "When Mr. Habib did not give the answers his interrogators
wanted, they threw a switch and a jolt of electricity" went through
the drum, it says. "The action of Mr. Habib 'dancing' on the drum
forced it to rotate, and his feet constantly slipped, leaving him
suspended by only the hooks on the wall . . . This ingenious cruelty
lasted until Mr. Habib finally fainted."

At other times, the petition alleges, he was placed in ankle-deep
water that his interrogators told him "was wired to an electric
current, and that unless Mr. Habib confessed, they would throw the
switch and electrocute him."

Habib says he gave false confessions to stop the abuse.

The State Department's annual human rights report has consistently
criticized Egypt for practices that include torturing prisoners.

After six months in Egypt, the petition says, Habib was flown to
Bagram Air Base in Afghanistan.

U.S. intelligence officials have said renditions -- and the threat of
renditions -- are a potent device to induce suspected terrorists to
divulge information. Habib's petition says the threat that detainees
at Bagram would be sent to Egypt prompted many of them to offer
confessions.

His petition argues that his "removal to Egypt would be unquestionably
unlawful" in part because he "faces almost certain torture."

The U.N. Convention Against Torture says no party to the treaty "shall
expel, return or extradite a person to another State where there are
substantial grounds for believing that he would be in danger of being
subjected to torture."

"The fact that the United States would contemplate sending him to
Egypt again is astonishing to me," said Margulies, the attorney.

Researcher Julie Tate contributed to this report. 

http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A51726-2005Jan5.html







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