Revealed: the terror prison US is helping
build in Morocco
Times Online (UK)
Tom Walker Rabat and Sarah Baxter
February 12, 2006
THE United States is helping Morocco to build a new interrogation and
detention facility for Al-Qaeda suspects near its capital, Rabat, according to
western intelligence sources.
The sources confirmed last week that building was under way at Ain Aouda,
above a wooded gorge south of Rabat's diplomatic district. Locals said they had
often seen American vehicles with diplomatic plates in the area.
The construction of the new compound, run by the Direction de la
Securité du Territoire (DST), the Moroccan secret police, adds to a
substantial body of evidence that Morocco is one of America's principal
partners in the secret "rendition" programme in which the CIA flies prisoners
to third countries for interrogation.
Amnesty International, Human Rights Watch and other groups critical of the
policy have compiled dossiers detailing the detention and apparent torture of
radical Islamists at the DST's current headquarters, at Temara, near Rabat.
A recent inquiry into rendition by the Council of Europe, led by Dick Marty,
the Swiss MP, highlighted a pattern of flights between Washington, Guantanamo
Bay and Rabat's military airport at Sale.
French intelligence and diplomatic sources said the most recent such flight
was in the first week in December, when four suspects were seen being led
blindfolded and handcuffed from a Boeing 737 at Sale and transferred into a
fleet of American vehicles.
Morocco's membership of a so-called "coalition of the willing" has led to
tension within the kingdom, where Mohammed VI, 42, is trying to suppress a wave
of Islamic fundamentalism, most powerfully expressed in the Casablanca bombings
of May 2003, in which 12 suicide bombers — all of them Moroccan —
killed more than 40 people.
More than 3,000 suspected radical Islamists have been arrested since, but
some of the country's higher-profile Al-Qaeda sympathisers have been released,
including Abdallah Tabarak, a former bodyguard of Osama Bin Laden.
While much of the media is said to have been infiltrated by the DST, a few
publications that dare to question official policy have accused the government
of allowing Morocco to become "the CIA's dustbin".
Donald Rumsfeld, the American defence secretary — who described
Morocco and Tunisia yesterday as "long-standing friends and constructive
partners" in the fight against terrorism — is due to visit today. Among
the topics expected to be discussed with officials is the opening of a new FBI
office in Morocco.
Last Friday the country witnessed its first protests against the Danish
cartoons of the prophet Muhammad. They were highly organised and controlled but
created a sense of apprehension in the capital before Rumsfeld's talks.
Morocco has an estimated 30,000 policemen for a population of 30m and many
people seem scared of speaking to strangers. A Sunday Times reporter was
photographed by men with mobile phone cameras at least three times last week
but was never directly challenged.
"It's like a web — they let you spin away and like that they believe
they get more information," said the French intelligence source.
The presence of minders made asking questions around Ain Aouda almost
impossible, but at a restaurant adjoining a newly built mosque nearby, elderly
men supping mint tea while they watched the African Nations Cup were clearly
angry about the project.
"We've seen nothing but Americans for five months," complained one wizened
figure before being told by his friends to be quiet.
There are no public access roads leading to the site, which can be seen at
the moment only from a bend above the Korifla Gorge. The secluded forest
setting is similar to that of Temara, 10 miles to the north.
Moroccan officials refused to make any comment about Ain Aouda. A
spokeswoman for the American embassy said she had no information about the new
building.
Temara itself already has a fearsome reputation among former inmates. Binyam
Mohammed, an Ethiopian-born Briton later sent to Guantanamo Bay, told Amnesty
International that interrogators there cut his chest and penis when he refused
to answer questions.
Mohammed said he was held at Temara for 18 months before being flown to
another "black prison" in Afghanistan in January 2004, and then on to
Guantanamo Bay.
It is not clear how many suspects are being questioned in Morocco. The
French intelligence source said the four brought to the country in December
were all believed to be "high profile" but gave no further details.
|