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Rumsfeld 'ordered torture'
26/10/2007 12:21 - (SA)
Paris - American and European rights groups filed a legal complaint in France accusing former US Defence Secretary Donald Rumsfeld of being responsible for torture in Iraq and at the US military prison in Guantanamo Bay, the groups said on Friday.
The New York-based Centre for Constitutional Rights, the Berlin-based European Centre for Constitutional and Human Rights and two Paris-based groups, the International Federation of Human Rights and the League of Human Rights, said they filed the complaint with the Paris prosecutor's office as Rumsfeld arrived in France for a visit.
The groups say their complaint could go forward because people suspected of torture can be prosecuted in France if they are on French soil.
The complaint says Rumsfeld, in his former position as defence secretary, "authorised and ordered crimes of torture to be carried out ... as well as other war crimes".
Filed on Thursday, the complaint cites various documents, including memos from Rumsfeld, internal reports and testimony from former US Army Brig Gen Janis Karpinski - the one-time commander of US military prisons in Iraq - to bolster its claims. It asks the prosecutor to open an inquiry and take Rumsfeld into custody.
"We know that we can't get him into prison right now, but it would be great to make sure that he couldn't safely leave the US anymore," said Michael Ratner, president of the Centre for Constitutional Rights.
Ratner's group already filed a formal request in Germany to try to bring an investigation against Rumsfeld and other current and former Bush officials for either ordering, aiding or failing to prevent the torture.
German federal prosecutors rejected that request in April, saying it was up to the US to hold any inquiry.
Ratner said his group had tried to take the case to European courts because "no one (in the United States), not even the Congress, is ready to investigate the torture programme", and because the case could not be brought with the International Criminal Court, as the United States is not a member.
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