Opposition questions Turkey’s links with CIA torture practices
The main opposition Republican Peopleâs Party (CHP) has questioned Turkeyâs possible role in the CIAâs torture program after the 9/11 attacks, after last weekâs Senate report on the U.S. intelligence agencyâs âenhanced interrogationâ techniques.
CHP deputy Faruk LoÄoÄlu filed a parliamentary motion to Prime Minister Ahmet DavutoÄlu made up of nine questions, including whether CIA aircraft used Turkish air space and military bases, and whether the agency requested the establishment of a secret prison in Turkey.
A United States Senateâs committee report revealed that CIA officers used brutal interrogation techniques on hundreds of terror suspects, turning heads to the potential ally governments that may have cooperated in the program.
As a result, LoÄoÄlu, who served as Turkeyâs Washington ambassador between 2001 and 2006, the years after the 9/11 attacks when the CIAâs torture practices were at their peak, asked the Turkish government to explain the extent of its links with the program.
âHas Turkey ever been a partner in the CIAâs unlawful and secret actions in any way?â the motion asks. In addition to asking whether the CIA requested the establishment of a secret prison in Turkey, LoÄoÄlu also questioned whether CIA planes used Turkish airspace and airports, and whether they had made stops in Turkey for fuel or any other purposes.
âIs true that the Turkish authorities permitted secret CIA flights between 2002 and 2006? Is it true that the Ä°ncirlik military base in the southern province of Adana was used 24 times,â he asked.
LoÄoÄlu specifically recalled a 2007 European Parliament report that unveiled over 1,000 CIA-operated flights using European airspace from 2001 to...
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