Tag: detention centre

  • The CIA Detention Centers in Romania

    The CIA Detention Centers in Romania

    The Senate
    leadership will next week decide whether to officially request the
    declassification of the documents included in the US Congress report on the
    existence of secret CIA detention facilities on Romanian territory. Also next
    week Parliament will discuss the set up of a new Committee in charge of
    re-launching the internal investigation on this topic. Senators from the
    Romanian Defense Committee proposed this line of action following their recent
    meeting with MEPs members of the European Commission Committee for Civil
    Liberties, Justice and Home Affairs.

    As a signatory to the UN Universal
    Declaration of Human Rights, Romania
    condemns illegal interrogation and torture methods, Liberal Senator Marius
    Obreja, the chairman of the Senate’s Defense Committee explained. Obreja said
    no additional evidence, other than the content of the Senate’s original report
    from the 2006-2008 period, points to the existence of the so-called US
    intelligence ‘black sites’. For over a decade, Romania has been on a list of
    countries suspected of having hosted CIA secret facilities. Nevertheless,
    little evidence to substantiate this claim has surfaced since then.

    This
    spring, the former Social-Democrat president of Romania in the early 2000s Ion
    Iliescu admitted he provided CIA with such a facility as a sign of good will
    towards the US, ahead of Romania’s NATO accession. Romanian authorities however
    had no part in the activity of the US intelligence service and were not aware
    of what was really happening, Iliescu insisted. This is the second time, after
    Polish president Aleksander Kwasniewski, that a head of state goes public about
    the existence of CIA secret facilities in Europe. We were allies, we were
    fighting together in Afghanistan and the Middle East, Ion Iliescu said
    referring to the period post 9/11.

    Shocked by the horrendous loss of lives in
    the tragic terrorist attacks carried out by Al-Qaeda radicals, global public
    opinion was less adamant back then about the methods used by US and allied
    agents. At the time the popular stake was to prevent such massacres from
    reoccurring, all the more so as after 9/11 Madrid and London were targeted by
    new terrorist attacks. Only later did the debate arise surrounding the
    so-called ‘black sites’ and the unwarranted use of violence in interrogation of
    terrorist suspects. Liberal MEP Norica Nicolai believes Iliescu’s statements
    bring nothing new and do not dismiss the conclusions of Parliament’s
    Investigation Committee of 2008, which she led as a Romanian Senator back then.
    The Senate’s report concluded that there was no evidence back then in Romania
    confirming the existence of CIA secret facilities or rendition flights.