http://www.iht.com/articles/ap/2007/02/27/america/NA-GEN-US-CIA-Missing-Detainees.php

Terror suspect provides rare account of 2-1/2 years of CIA custody
The Associated Press
Published: February 27, 2007

While held incommunicado for more than two years by the United States 
and Pakistan, accused jihadist Marwan Jabour claims he was beaten, 
burned with an iron, held naked for a month and chained to the wall of 
his cell so tightly that he could not stand up.

His rare account of the secret world of terror detentions — provided in 
a new report from Human Rights Watch — ended last summer when the United 
States flew him to Jordan from a secret detention facility that he 
believed to be in Afghanistan. By September, the Jordanians turned him 
over to the Israelis. Six weeks later, he was let go in the Gaza Strip, 
where the 30-year-old Palestinian had family.

U.S. counterterrorism officials would not confirm Jabour's account, but 
they say they still view Jabour as one of al-Qaida's most dangerous 
members. One official, who spoke on condition of anonymity because of 
the information's sensitivity, said Jabour was in direct contact with 
al-Qaida's operational leaders, had ties to al-Qaida's chemical and 
biological programs and plotted to attack U.S. troops in Afghanistan.

Human Rights Watch interviewed Jabour in December and is telling his 
story as part of a quest for more information. The group wants President 
George W. Bush to disclose the fate of all terror suspects held since 
2001, including at least 16 that the organization believes were detained 
in secret CIA facilities. Their whereabouts remain unknown.

The group is also investigating what has happened to another 22 
detainees whose fate is murkier. Human Rights Watch believes they may 
have been held by the CIA.

In a letter to Bush on Monday, Joanne Mariner, director of Human Rights 
Watch's terrorism and counterterrorism program, said her organization 
recognizes some terror suspects may have committed crimes that merit 
incarceration. Yet "the decision to imprison such persons must be taken 
in accordance with legal processes," she said.

Rather than vanishing, they should be charged with crimes, she said.

In a statement, CIA spokesman Paul Gimigliano said the agency's 
interrogation program has been conducted lawfully — "with great care and 
close review, producing vital information that has helped disrupt plots 
and save lives."

Gimigliano said that is also true of renditions, when terror suspects 
are grabbed from one country and taken to another for detention and 
questioning. He called it "another key, lawful tool in the fight against 
terror."

"The United States does not conduct or condone torture, nor does it 
transfer anyone to other countries for the purpose of torture," 
Gimigliano said.

In his interviews with Human Rights Watch in December, Jabour 
acknowledged only some ties to Arab militants. He said he trained in a 
militant camp in Afghanistan in 1998, went to Afghanistan in 2001 for a 
couple of weeks after the U.S.-led invasion and helped Arab militants 
who fled Afghanistan in 2003.

Jabour said he was arrested in Lahore, Pakistan, in May 2004. He said he 
suffered the worst physical abuses during more than a month in Pakistani 
custody: beatings, being burnt with a hot metal rod and having string 
tied tightly to his penis to prevent him from urinating.

Later, in American custody, he said he was held naked for about six 
weeks and only gradually earned clothing. He described circumstances 
consistent with other detainee reports, including loud music, shackles 
and small, isolated cells.

But he said conditions gradually improved. He told Human Rights Watch 
that he was eventually moved to a larger, quieter room and given access 
to books. A year into his detention, he was allowed to see a movie once 
a week, choosing from a library of more than 200 films.

Jabour was transferred to Jordanian custody last summer and was handed 
over to the Israelis on Sept. 18.

Within days, he said, he met with a lawyer and a judge. Within weeks, he 
was released.

His status changed as Bush publicly acknowledged the CIA's secret prison 
program and said he was transferring the last 14 of the agency's 
detainees to Pentagon custody at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba.

"There are now no terrorists in the CIA program," Bush said in 
September. "But as more high-ranking terrorists are captured, the need 
to obtain intelligence from them will remain critical — and having a CIA 
program for questioning terrorists will continue to be crucial to 
getting lifesaving information."

Human Rights Watch is wondering what happened to the rest of the 
detainees who are believed to have traveled through the CIA's hands.

The group has a list of 16 that it believes were in CIA custody, 
including Mustafa Setmarian Nasar. The red-haired Syrian with Spanish 
citizenship is considered a jihadist ideologue and writer. U.S. 
officials have confirmed that he was seized in the southwestern 
Pakistani city of Quetta in November 2005, and Pakistani officials said 
he was flown out of the country. But his location is unknown.

The list also includes Mohammed Omar Abdel-Rahman, the son of the "Blind 
Sheikh." His father is serving life in prison for crimes related to the 
1993 World Trade Center bombing and the 1995 plots against New York 
landmarks.

Human Rights Watch said the United States may have transferred the 
detainees to other countries that are cooperating with the CIA. The 
group worries that the detainees could have been returned to their home 
countries — including Syria, Algeria, Egypt or Libya — where torture is 
common.

"The U.S. government has long condemned these abusive practices in its 
policy statements and annual human rights reports," its report said. 
"Its own use of them severely undermines its moral authority on human 
rights."

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