Syria-Lebanon-Iran |
Iran: UN experts condemn alleged torture of prisoners |
2009-08-14 |
[ADN Kronos] United Nations human rights experts voiced serious concern on Thursday over accusations of torture and rough interrogation tactics used against protesters jailed during the recent unrest in Iran following its disputed presidential election. "No judicial system can consider as valid a confession obtained as a result of harsh interrogations or under torture," stressed Manfred Nowak, the UN's special rapporteur on torture. The victims include lawyers, journalists and other human rights defenders, as well as members of the opposition who took to the streets to demonstrate over the results of the 12 June polls, according to the UN experts. About 200 people arrested during the mass protests provoked by June's disputed election, remain in detention, around 100 of whom are facing trial. The charges include spying, conspiracy, rioting and vandalism. The opposition alleges the polls were rigged to ensure hardline president Mahmoud Ahmadinejad's re-election, and wants the them annulled. The government says the election was the "healthiest" since the 1979 Iranian Revolution. Nowak said he had brought more than 300 cases of alleged torture and ill-treatment to the attention of Iranian authorities. The allegations came from ex-detainees as well as relatives and lawyers of people still being held, Nowak said. Most involved alleged torture at Evin prison in Tehran or at Kahrizak detention centre outside the capital, but also concerned police stations, according to Nowak. "These confessions for alleged crimes such as threats against national security and treason must not, under any circumstances, be admitted as evidence by the Revolutionary Court," added El Hadji Malick Sow, vice-chairperson of the UN's working group on arbitrary detention. Sow was referring to the court currently conducting trials of detained protesters, which have been described by some western and other commentators as show-trials. Foreign media have been banned from covering the judicial proceedings and it is unclear whether the defendants have adequate legal counsel, noted the experts. They also include the UN's special rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, Margaret Sekaggya. The experts added that many detainees are kept without any communication with the outside world, without knowing the charges they face, medical treatment, legal assistance or family visits. The UN rights experts said they continue to receive reports of people dying in custody, and whose families are given false or contradictory information regarding the cause of death. Iran's most senior dissident cleric, Ayatollah Hossein Ali Montazeri, has compared the mass trials of government opponents and public confessions to the tactics of former Soviet dictator Josef Stalin, former Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein and other authoritarian rulers. |
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Home Front: Politix |
Obama's Prosecutions by Proxy |
2009-05-06 |
By John R. Bolton President Obama's passivity before the threatened foreign prosecution of Bush administration officials achieves by inaction what he fears doing directly. This may be smart politics within the Democratic Party, but it risks grave long-term damage to the United States. Ironically, it could also come back to bite future Obama administration alumni, including the president, for their current policies in Iraq, Afghanistan and elsewhere. Obama has taken ambiguous, and flatly contradictory, positions on whether to prosecute Bush administration advisers and decision makers involved in "harsh interrogation techniques." Although he immunized intelligence operatives who conducted the interrogations, morale at the CIA is at record lows. The president has played to the crowd politically, but the principles underlying his policies are opaque and continually subject to change. This hardly constitutes leadership. Despite uncertainties here, developments overseas proceed apace. Spanish Magistrate Baltasar Garzón opened a formal investigation last week of six Bush administration lawyers for their roles in advising on interrogation techniques. Garzón did so over the objections of Spain's attorney general, as he did in 1998 in proceeding against former Chilean president Augusto Pinochet. Under Spain's inquisitorial judicial system, Garzón is essentially unaccountable, whatever the views of Spain's elected government. Asked repeatedly about Garzón's investigation, the State Department has said only that it is a matter for the Spanish judicial system. Last week, Attorney General Eric Holder went further, implying that the Obama administration could cooperate. "Obviously, we would look at any request that would come from a court in any country and see how and whether we should comply with it," Holder said. This is deeply troubling. Obama appears to be following the John Ehrlichman approach, letting the U.S. lawyers "twist slowly, slowly in the wind." Garzón's is far from a run-of-the-mill police investigation in which an American tourist abroad runs afoul of some local ordinance. Indeed, from what appears publicly, U.S. consular officials would do more for the tourist than Obama is doing for the former Bush officials. If Obama is attempting to end the Garzón investigation, it is one of our best-kept secrets in decades. Although the six lawyers are in a precarious position, they are only intermediate targets. The real targets are President Bush and his most senior advisers, and the real aim is to intimidate U.S. officials into refraining from making hard but necessary decisions to protect our national security. There is never a shortage of second-guessers about U.S. foreign policy. For example, former U.N. high commissioner for human rights Mary Robinson said during the NATO-Serbia war over Kosovo that "civilian casualties are human rights victims." She asked, "If it is not possible to ascertain whether civilian buses are on bridges, should those bridges be blown?" The question here is not whether one agrees or disagrees with the advice the lawyers gave, or with their superiors' operative decisions concerning interrogation techniques. Nor is it even whether one believes our Justice Department should launch criminal investigations into their actions. (I believe strongly that criminalizing policy disagreements is both inappropriate and destructive.) Instead, the critical question is who judges the official actions that U.S. personnel took while holding government office. Is it our own executive and judicial branches, within our constitutional structures and protections, or some unaccountable foreign or international magistrate in some unaccountable distant court? The proper U.S. position is to insist that our Constitution alone governs any review of our officials' conduct. This issue is not abstract. For the six lawyers, it has immediate effects on their lives, careers and families. Moreover, whether or not Obama has decided against prosecuting CIA agents, his decision in no way binds the creative mind of Señor Garzón, a man who has never shied from spotlights. Indeed, U.N. Special Rapporteur Manfred Nowak has already said that the other 145 states party to the Convention Against Torture must launch their own criminal investigations if the United States does not. Behind-the-scenes diplomacy is often the best, and sometimes the only, way to accomplish important policy objectives, and one hopes that such efforts are underway. But in this case, firm and public statements are necessary to stop the pending Spanish inquisition and to dissuade others from proceeding. The president must abandon his Ehrlichman-like policy and pronounce unequivocally that Spain should take whatever steps are necessary to stop Garzón. Otherwise, in four or eight years, like Mary Robinson before them, future second-guessers will decide, say, that U.S. drone attacks in Pakistan constitute war crimes, and that former commander in chief Obama must be hauled before the bar of some mini-state to stand trial. After all, his decisions involve risking civilian deaths, not just shoving terrorists into a wall (and no protective neck braces, either). Will President Obama's successor vigorously dispute the legitimacy of foreign prosecutions, or will she follow the current Obama policy and let the foreign investigation proceed, perhaps even to trial? Obama and his advisers should think carefully about that second scenario -- now. The writer, a senior fellow at the American Enterprise Institute, was U.S. ambassador to the United Nations from August 2005 to December 2006 and is the author of "Surrender Is Not an Option: Defending America at the United Nations and Abroad" (Simon & Schuster, 2007). |
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Home Front: WoT |
UN torture envoy: US must prosecute Bush lawyers |
2009-04-26 |
VIENNA (AP) - The U.S. is obligated by a United Nations convention to prosecute Bush administration lawyers who allegedly drafted policies that approved the use of harsh interrogation tactics against terrorism suspects, the U.N.'s top anti-torture envoy said Friday. Earlier this week, President Barack Obama left the door open to prosecuting Bush administration officials who devised the legal authority for gruesome terror-suspect interrogations. He had previously absolved CIA officers from prosecution. Gruesome? I believe not. Harsh? Hardly. Manfred Nowak, who serves as a U.N. special rapporteur in Geneva, said Washington is obligated under the U.N. Convention against Torture to prosecute U.S. Justice Department officials who wrote memos that defined torture in the narrowest way in order to justify and legitimize it, and who assured CIA officials that their use of questionable tactics was legal. "That's exactly what I call complicity or participation" to torture as defined by the convention, Nowak said at a news conference. "At that time, every reasonable person would know that waterboarding, for instance, is torture." Nowak, an Austrian law professor, said it was up to U.S. courts and prosecutors to prove that the memos were written with the intention to incite torture. They were written to with the intention of getting information to keep U.S. Citizens from getting murdered. Nowak also said any probe of questionable CIA interrogation tactics must be independent and have thorough investigative powers. Bite me, Manfred. "It can be a congressional investigation commission, a special investigator, but it must be independent and with thorough investigative powers," Nowak said. The memos authorized keeping detainees naked, in painful standing positions and in cold cells for long periods of time. Other techniques included depriving them of solid food and slapping them. Sleep deprivation, prolonged shackling and threats to a detainee's family also were used. Oh, the Humanity! How gruesome! Nowak said Saturday that Obama's decision not to prosecute CIA operatives who used questionable interrogation practices violates the same U.N. convention. But at that point he did not specifically address the issue of how the convention would apply to those who drafted the interrogation policy and gave the CIA the legal go-ahead. |
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Home Front: WoT | ||
Court mulls early release of Uighurs from Gitmo | ||
2008-11-24 | ||
A federal appeals court expressed skepticism Monday about a judge's order releasing 17 Turkic Muslims from Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, into the United States. During oral arguments, a three-judge panel of the U.S. Court of Appeals for the D.C. Circuit indicated that a federal judge might have acted too quickly last month in ordering the immediate release of the 17 men, known as Uighurs (WEE'-gurz). The three judges suggested that the detainees might need to formally apply to enter the country via the Homeland Security Department, which administers U.S. immigration laws. "Before they can be admitted into this country, there are immigration statutes to be addressed and petitioners haven't pursued that yet," said Judge Judith W. Rogers, who previously expressed support for the Uighurs' immediate release. Immigration Clerk: Name? Terrorist: Achmed. IC: How long will you be staying? T: Not long. IC: Purpose of visit? T: Terrorism. IC: Any fruits or vegetable or contraband animals? T: No. IC: Wait in the line to your right. T: I KEEL You! IC: Next. Solicitor General Gregory Garre told the court that releasing the detainees into the U.S. was a matter for the president -- not the courts -- given questions of national security and diplomacy. The Muslims were cleared for release from Guantanamo as early as 2003 but fear they will be tortured if they are returned to China. "It's regrettable they are in this situation, but we are active in seeking another country to take them," Garre said. At issue in Monday's arguments is whether a federal judge has the authority to order the release of prisoners at Guantanamo who were unlawfully detained by the U.S. and cannot be sent back to their homeland. U.S. District Judge Richard Urbina last month ordered the government to release the 17 men into the United States, noting that they were no longer considered enemy combatants. Urbina sternly rebuked the Bush administration for a detention policy toward the Uighurs that "crossed the constitutional threshold into infinitum." The Bush administration quickly sued to block Urbina's order, citing security concerns over weapons training the Uighurs received at camps in Afghanistan. A divided D.C. Circuit court in late October agreed to temporarily halt the Uighurs' release so it could consider the government's full appeal. That same three-judge panel heard arguments Monday. The panel was composed of Rogers, an appointee of President Bill Clinton, and Karen Henderson and A. Raymond Randolph, both appointees of President George H.W. Bush. Roughly 20 percent of about 250 detainees who remain at Guantanamo fear torture or persecution if they return to their home countries, according to the New York-based Center for Constitutional Rights. The Bush administration has long maintained that, unless another country agrees to take them, the detainees should stay at Guantanamo.
Last week, a federal judge ordered the release of five Algerian men after rejecting government allegations that they were "enemy combatants." U.S. District Judge Richard Leon also urged the Justice Department not to appeal, saying the detainees had languished at Guantanamo long enough. | ||
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Britain | ||
Extraordinary rendition inquiry moves forward | ||
2008-03-30 | ||
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Nowak has offered to share his information - which was given on a confidential basis - if he can gain agreement from his sources.
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Britain | ||||||||||
One more round on Diego Garcia prison claims | ||||||||||
2007-10-19 | ||||||||||
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Lawyers from Reprieve, a Clive Stafford Smith, the charity's legal director, said he was "absolutely and categorically certain" that prisoners have been held on the island. "If the foreign affairs committee approaches this thoroughly, they will get to the bottom of it," he said.
UK officials are known to have questioned their American counterparts about the allegation several times over a period of more than three years, most recently last month. Whenever MPs have attempted to press ministers in the Commons, they have met with the same response: that the US authorities "have repeatedly given us assurances" that no terrorism suspects have been held there.
Barry McCaffrey, a retired four-star US general who is professor of international security studies at the West Point military academy, has twice spoken publicly about the use of Diego Garcia to detain suspects. In May 2004 he said: "We're probably holding around 3,000 people, you know, Bagram air field, Diego Garcia, Guantánamo, 16 camps throughout Iraq." In December last year he repeated the claim: "They're behind bars...we've got them on Diego Garcia, in Bagram air field, in Guantánamo."
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International-UN-NGOs |
UN torture investigator fears abuse with new US law |
2006-09-29 |
GENEVA - The UN torture investigator charged on Friday that a new US law for tough interrogation of terrorism suspects would deprive people of the right to a fair trial before independent courts and could lead to mistreatment. Manfred Nowak, United Nations special rapporteur on torture, regretted that the bill ignored UN rights bodies which have said US interrogation methods and prolonged detentions violate international law. The Senate gave final approval on Thursday to the bill, a day after its passage by the House of Representatives. President George W. Bush is expected to sign it into law very soon. I am afraid that with the new law, the interrogation methods will not really change. Bush has said that harsh interrogation methods will continue and that is my concern, the Austrian law professor said in a telephone interview. The UN Committee against Torture and UN Human Rights Committee have found the US interrogation methods are unlawful and expressed concern at arbitrary detentions. The bill does not take into account substantive criticism from our side ... It is not the signal that I would have expected the US government and Congress would make in order to try to comply with our recommendations, Nowak said. The bill sets standards for interrogating suspects, but with complex rules that rights groups say could allow techniques that border on torture such as sleep deprivation. |
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Home Front: WoT | ||||
UN rights rapporteur claims Gitmo may close year-end | ||||
2006-07-04 | ||||
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International-UN-NGOs |
New Zealand expert stands by Gitmo criticism |
2006-02-20 |
A New Zealand expert on physical and mental health has stood by findings that US detention camp Guantanamo Bay, in Cuba, should be shut down. Professor Paul Hunt, of both the University of Waikato and the University of Essex, was part of a five-member team appointed by the UN Human Rights Commission to investigate conditions at the "war on terror" detention camp. The group also included Leila Zerrougui, an expert on arbitrary detention; Leandro Despouy, expert on judicial independence; Manfred Nowak, an expert on torture; and Asma Jahangir, an expert on freedom of religion. The US is currently holding about 490 men at the camp who are accused of having links to Afghanistan's ousted Taleban regime or the al Qaeda terror group, though only a handful have been charged since January 2001. The team investigating the detention camp concluded that the United States should bring all prisoners to an independent trial or release them. The authors did not visit the camp because the US government refused them access to inmates, so their report was based on "credible" accounts of life at Guantanamo Bay. The Americans agreed that three of the authors could visit the camp but could not speak, either privately or publicly, to detainees. "That was unacceptable to us," Prof Hunt told National Radio today. The government did, however, reply to a detailed questionnaire supplied by the report team. The US government described the report as a "discredit" to the United Nations. If the camp was not closed, the authors believed that detainees should have the opportunity to test the lawfulness of their incarceration. Abusive treatment of prisoners should stop, and conditions generally should be improved and UN inspectors should be allowed in, Prof Hunt said. "It would been a dereliction of duty if we'd closed our eyes to Guantanamo Bay." The report will be presented to the United Nations in a few weeks' time where decisions will be made on what steps to take next. The team was appointed by the commission to the three-year project. They worked independently, with expenses covered but receiving no payment from the UN. |
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International-UN-NGOs |
Usual suspects again push for Gitmo closure |
2006-02-17 |
The United States came under mounting international pressure to close its Guantanamo prison, with U.N. investigators saying detainees there faced treatment amounting to torture. In a 40-page report, which had already been largely leaked, five United Nations special envoys said the United States was violating a host of human rights, including a ban on torture, arbitrary detention and the right to a fair trial. The White House, calling the Guantanamo detainees "dangerous terrorists," dismissed the report as a reworking of past allegations and said that inmates were humanely treated. But the findings could fuel anger among Arabs already incensed by images of abuse of Iraqi inmates at Baghdad's U.S.-run Abu Ghraib prison newly broadcast by Australian television. "The United States government should close the Guantanamo Bay detention facilities without further delay," the human rights rapporteurs declared. Until that happened, the U.S. government should "refrain from any practice amounting to torture or cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment or punishment," they added. U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan said he did not agree with everything in the report, produced by independent experts for the inter-governmental U.N. Human Rights Commission, but he believed the prison should be closed as soon as possible. "Sooner or later there will be a need to close Guantanamo and it will be up to the government to decide and hopefully to do it as soon as possible," he told reporters in New York. He said it was important to balance the interests of effective action against terrorism with the need to protect individual rights, but people should not be detained "in perpetuity" and should be prosecuted or released. U.N. Human Rights Commissioner Louise Arbour, who has frequently urged the United States to try the detainees or free them, told the BBC in London that the jail should be shut. Many of the 500 inmates of the prison at the U.S. naval base in Cuba have been held for four years without trial. The prisoners were mainly detained in Afghanistan and are held as pat of President George W. Bush's declared war against terrorism. Adding its voice to the clamour, the European parliament voted overwhelmingly on Thursday for a resolution urging the prison be closed and inmates given a fair trail. Bush's spokesman Scott McClellan said the report appeared to be "a rehash of some of the allegations that have been made by lawyers for some of the detainees and we know that al Qaeda detainees are trained in trying to disseminate false allegations." He also indicated that the calls to close the jail would fall on deaf ears. "These are dangerous terrorists that we're talking about that are there and I think we've talked about that issue before and nothing's changed in terms of our views," McClellan added. Amnesty International backed the call for shutting down Guantanamo, which it said represented "just the tip of the iceberg" of U.S.-run detention facilities worldwide. "The U.S. can no longer make the case, morally or legally, for keeping it open," the London-based human rights group said. The report said harsh treatment, such as placing detainees in solitary confinement, stripping them naked, subjecting them to severe temperatures and threatening them with dogs could amount to torture, which is banned in all circumstances. The five investigators said they were particularly concerned by attempts by the U.S. administration to "redefine" the nature of torture to allow some interrogation techniques. Washington, which denies any international laws are being broken, accused the U.N. investigators of acting like prosecution lawyers with the report, selecting only those elements that backed their case. The Bush administration also denies that the force-feeding of inmates on hunger strike, which it says was undertaken to save their lives, amounted to cruel treatment. The five U.N. investigators, who include Manfred Nowak, special rapporteur on torture, and Leila Zerrougui, chairwoman of the U.N. Working Group on Arbitrary Detention, said the findings were based on interviews with past detainees, lawyers and replies to questions put to the U.S. government. The five turned down a U.S. offer to visit the detention centre late last year because Washington would not allow them to interview individual detainees. Communist Cuba, which has accused Washington of turning the base on the island's southerastern tip into a "concentration camp," said U.S. rejection of the report came as no surprise. "The United States only accepts reports that are favourable. It is not surprising it continues to ignore the U.N. whenever convenient," said Ricardo Alarcon, speaker of Cuba's National Assembly. |
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Home Front: WoT | ||||
UN report calls for closure of Guantánamo | ||||
2006-02-14 | ||||
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The report, prepared by five envoys from the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and due for release tomorrow, is bound to deepen international criticism of the detention centre. Drafts of the report were leaked to the Los Angeles Times and the Telegraph newspapers, but UN envoys refused to comment yesterday. During an 18-month investigation, the envoys interviewed freed prisoners, lawyers and doctors to collect information on the detainees, who have been held for the last four years without access to US judicial oversight. The envoys did not have access to the 500 prisoners who are still being held at the detention centre.
The report lists techniques in use at Guantánamo that are banned under the UN's convention against torture, including prolonged periods of isolation, exposure to extremes of heat and cold, and humiliation, including forced shaving. The UN report also focuses on a relatively new area of concern in Guantánamo - the resort to violent force-feeding to end a hunger strike by inmates. Guards at Guantánamo began force-feeding the protesters last August, strapping them on stretchers and inserting large tubes into their nasal passages, according to a lawyer for Kuwaiti detainees who has had contact with the UN envoys. The effort to break the hunger strike has accelerated since the UN envoys produced their draft, with inmates strapped in restraint chairs for hours and fed laxatives so that they defecate on themselves. "The government is not doing things to keep them alive. It is really conducting tactics to deprive them of the ability to be on hunger strike because the hunger strike is an embarrassment to them," said Thomas Wilner, an attorney at the Washington firm Shearman & Sterlin, who represents several Kuwaiti detainees.
Tom Malinowski, Washington director of Human Rights Watch, said: "This is going to solidify the already highly negative views around the world about what the United States is doing in Guantánamo, and since the Red Cross complaints are more than a year old, it will suggest to a lot of people around the world that the problems are not solved." However, the report did not seem to carry weight in Washington. A White House spokesman said it was an al-Qaida tactic to complain of abuse, while the Pentagon does not comment on UN matters. But a Pentagon official yesterday insisted there had been no attempts to break a hunger strike with punitive measures. "All detainees at Guantánamo are being treated humanely and are being provided with excellent medical care," he said.
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Europe |
Berlin under fire for aiding Uzbek 'butcher' |
2005-12-20 |
ISN SECURITY WATCH (20/12/05) - Despite repeated calls from human rights organizations and the UN, an Uzbek official allegedly involved in a massacre has entered and left Germany without being prosecuted. Uzbek Interior Minister Zokirjon Almatov was treated in a clinic in Hannover, Germany, for cancer. Almatov tops a list of 12 senior Uzbek officials who are banned from entering the EU because of their role in the brutal police crackdown on demonstrators in the Uzbek city of Andijan in May. Berlin said it made an exception to the EU travel ban to allow Almatov to seek life-saving treatment. As Uzbekistanâs interior minister for the past 14 years, Almatov commanded the troops who fired indiscriminately into the crowds of protestors in May in Andijan, killing possibly 500 people or more, according to eyewitnesses and human rights groups. Uzbek officials claim that only 187 were shot dead by state forces, and that all of those killed were âterroristsâ. The EU has since imposed an arms embargo on Uzbekistan, and the UN has said previously that torture at the hand of the feared Interior Ministry-commanded police was commonplace in the authoritarian Central Asian republic. Last Friday, the UN special rapporteur on torture, Manfred Nowak, called on Germany to prosecute Almatov, a man also known as the âButcher of Tashkentâ. Nowak said torture was used in Uzbekistan âagainst persons charged with serious crimes, such as acts against state interests, as well as petty criminals and othersâ. Human Rights Watch filed a case against Almatov for crimes against humanity for murder and torture with Germanyâs Federal Prosecution Office on 12 December. But Almatov has since left Germany, according to information obtained by Human Rights Watch from the German embassy in Tashkent. The organizationâs EU Director, Lotte Leicht, told ISN Security Watch via telephone on Tuesday that Berlin should not have let him leave. âThis man has committed some of the worst crimes against humanity,â she said. âIt is stunning that Germany is the only place on the globe where this man could receive treatment.â A spokeswoman of the Federal Prosecution Office in Karlsruhe told ISN Security Watch that no formal investigation had been opened against Almatov, so no one could stop him from traveling freely.âWe first have to clarify whether the allegations are sufficient to open an investigation,â the spokeswoman said. âThat takes some time.â Leicht said she was very disappointed by Germanyâs record in the Almatov case. âI know it can take time, but the facts against him are quite overwhelming, and they were established not only by NGOs, but by respected UN bodies,â she said. âMr. Almatov should have at least been prevented from leaving the country until a decision was made over his case.â Observers say Almatovâs case could be one of political horse-trading: Berlin had initially revoked his entry, but then reconsidered its position after the leadership in Tashkent threatened to expel German armed forces from Uzbekistan. Germany remains the only NATO country to be able to use Uzbek airspace for military flights. While Tashkent recently closed down a US military base on its territory, Germany has been allowed to keep its troops in the southern part of the country near the Afghan border. |
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