|
NYT Friday: An Algerian's dark odyssey through US rendition The case of Khaled el-Masri, a German citizen who was held as part of the United States' anti-terrorism rendition program, was revealed last year, and German and U.S. officials have acknowledged that he was erroneously detained by the United States. But the tale of the other, an Algerian named Laid Saidi, has never been told before, and it carries a new set of allegations against America's secret detention program, the NEW YORK TIMES reports Friday. Excerpts: # In his lawyer's office in Algiers, he held up two white shoes he said his captors gave him before setting him free in August 2004. The only other physical evidence he offered of his imprisonment were fading scars on his wrists that he said were from having been chained to the ceiling of a cell for five days. While Saidi's allegations of torture cannot be corroborated, other elements of his story can be. A criminal investigation of the deaths in 2002 of two Afghan detainees being held in the U.S. military detention center in Bagram, north of Kabul, found that prisoners were often shackled to the ceiling by their wrists for punishment, as Saidi said he was. --------------------------------------------------- Prison Planet.tv: The Premier Multimedia Subscription Package: Download and Share the Truth! Please help our fight against the New World Order by giving a donation. As bandwidth costs increase, the only way we can stay online and expand is with your support. Please consider giving a monthly or one-off donation for whatever you can afford. You can pay securely by either credit card or Paypal. Click here to donate. |