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MI6 won’t be charged over kidnap, torture of Libyans | |
(about 1 hour later) | |
Britain’s Crown Prosecution Service (CPS) announced Thursday that no charges will be brought against British spies over the 2004 rendition of Libyan dissidents due to "insufficient evidence." | |
The Scotland Yard officers who have been building the case for over four years are likely to be dismayed, while spy agency MI6 and Jack Straw - who was foreign secretary with oversight of MI6 at the time - are likely to breathe a sigh of relief. | The Scotland Yard officers who have been building the case for over four years are likely to be dismayed, while spy agency MI6 and Jack Straw - who was foreign secretary with oversight of MI6 at the time - are likely to breathe a sigh of relief. |
The Belhaj case has rocked the British security establishment since it came to light. It followed the discovery of documents in the ruins of the Muammar Gaddafi regime. | The Belhaj case has rocked the British security establishment since it came to light. It followed the discovery of documents in the ruins of the Muammar Gaddafi regime. |
The files recovered from a government building destroyed during the 2011 US-led war showed that British spies were centrally involved in the Belhaj family’s kidnap in Thailand. | The files recovered from a government building destroyed during the 2011 US-led war showed that British spies were centrally involved in the Belhaj family’s kidnap in Thailand. |
Abdel Hakim Belhaj, a leading Islamist opponent of the Gaddafi regime, was taken to Libya and imprisoned for six years. He maintains he was tortured. | Abdel Hakim Belhaj, a leading Islamist opponent of the Gaddafi regime, was taken to Libya and imprisoned for six years. He maintains he was tortured. |
His pregnant wife was taped to a stretcher following the MI6 tip-off that betrayed the couple. She was then taken on a 17-hour flight and later imprisoned for four months. | His pregnant wife was taped to a stretcher following the MI6 tip-off that betrayed the couple. She was then taken on a 17-hour flight and later imprisoned for four months. |
Another dissident Sami al-Saadi was also mentioned in the documents. He too was imprisoned and claims to have been tortured. | Another dissident Sami al-Saadi was also mentioned in the documents. He too was imprisoned and claims to have been tortured. |
Both men say UK spies were present for their interrogations by Libyan secret services. | Both men say UK spies were present for their interrogations by Libyan secret services. |
During the same period, then-PM Tony Blair visited Colonel Gaddafi in Libya as part of a thaw in relations between the two countries. | During the same period, then-PM Tony Blair visited Colonel Gaddafi in Libya as part of a thaw in relations between the two countries. |
The victims’ lawyers say such high-level political interactions position the kidnapping in a context of increased security cooperation and trade and energy deals worth millions. | The victims’ lawyers say such high-level political interactions position the kidnapping in a context of increased security cooperation and trade and energy deals worth millions. |
Al-Saadi reportedly received a £2.2-million pay-out from the UK, while Belhaj wants the British to make a formal apology to his wife. | Al-Saadi reportedly received a £2.2-million pay-out from the UK, while Belhaj wants the British to make a formal apology to his wife. |
The decision by the CPS will effectively halt ongoing investigations into Britain’s role in post 9/11 kidnap and torture. The process is known in the sanitized security jargon of the era as ‘extraordinary rendition’. | The decision by the CPS will effectively halt ongoing investigations into Britain’s role in post 9/11 kidnap and torture. The process is known in the sanitized security jargon of the era as ‘extraordinary rendition’. |
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