Federal appeals court affirms dismissal of el-Masri rendition caseMike Rosen-Molina at 6:22 PM ET
[JURIST] The
US Fourth Circuit Court of Appeals Friday
upheld [opinion, PDF] the dismissal of a rendition-related
lawsuit [complaint, PDF] by German citizen
Khaled El-Masri [Wikipedia profile; JURIST
news archive] against the
CIA [official website], deciding that the case could not be heard in a US court because of the government's
state secrets privilege [Sourcewatch backgrounder]. The
lawsuit [ACLU materials], argued by
ACLU [advocacy website] lawyers, charged former
CIA director George Tenet [Sourcewatch profile] and CIA officials with violating international human rights law by their involvement in the alleged kidnapping and
extraordinary rendition [JURIST news archive] of El-Masri to Afghanistan in 2003. ACLU Executive Director Anthony Romero
said [ACLU press release] the ruling turned the state secrets doctrine into "a shield that covers even the most blatant abuses of power.” AP has
more.
El-Masri alleged that CIA agents kidnapped him while on vacation in Macedonia in 2003 and transferred him to Afghanistan, where he was held in a secret prison for five months and subjected to inhumane conditions and coercive interrogation. He was eventually released in Albania in 2004 without charge. In October 2006, el-Masri
testified before a Spanish judge [JURIST report] as part of an
investigation [JURIST report] into whether the CIA used Spanish airports to transport el-Masri to countries where they could legally torture him. In June 2006, a German investigator concluded that no evidence had surfaced to
disprove el-Masri's story [JURIST report]. German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier
denied [JURIST report] in December 2006 that Germany had any knowledge of the alleged kidnapping.
Original article posted here.
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