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Saturday, May 22, 2010
UK’s role in war on terror under new scrutiny
LONDON: Britain will hold a formal inquiry into whether its government and spy agencies colluded in the torture of terrorism suspects overseas, a potentially embarrassing probe that could affect intelligence gathering and upset ties with allies including the US.
The government confirmed on Friday that Foreign Secretary William Hague had authorised a long-promised judge-led inquiry into allegations British officials were complicit in the mistreatment of suspects held by the US, Pakistan and others. A total of 12 men have filed lawsuits against the British government alleging officials were involved in their purported torture. Police are investigating the actions of two intelligence officers from the MI5 and MI6 spy agencies. Campaigners have long pressed for an inquiry supervised by a judge to examine Britain’s policy on torture. Their call was supported by the Conservative and Liberal Democrat parties, who last week formed Britain’s new coalition government.
The inquiry will be one of two separate reviews into how Britain pursued terrorists. A High Court judge ruled on Friday that a series of inquests into the deaths of 52 commuters in London’s 2005 transit network bombings would examine possible intelligence failures. It hasn’t been determined if part, or all, of the torture inquiry would be held in public, or whether it will have the power to compel witnesses to attend. The inquiry will be led by a senior judge – who are seen as more independent and authoritative than government officials - though no one has yet been appointed. agencies
Courtesy www.dailytimes.com.pk
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