Thousands of North Carolinians Join ACLU in Call for Investigation of Aero Contractors’ Involvement in Kidnap and Torture (3/21/2007)
FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE CONTACT: media@aclu.org
RALEIGH, NC - The American Civil Liberties Union of North Carolina today
joined 75 organizations and thousands of North Carolina residents to call on
federal and local officials to investigate the actions of Aero Contractors, a
Johnston County-based contract air carrier that transported foreign nationals
kidnapped by the CIA to be tortured in secret overseas prisons.
In a letter sent to government leaders today, the groups said that “it is
unconscionable that North Carolina taxpayers are asked to continue to host a
company that operates torture flights.” Aero Contractors uses the
facilities of state-funded Global TransPark as well as the Johnston County
airport in Smithfield.
“The strong grassroots support for this campaign should serve as a wake-up
call for state officials,” said Azadeh Shahshahani, an ACLU of North Carolina
attorney and coordinator of the ACLU’s Muslim/Middle Eastern Community Outreach
Project. “North Carolinians are not willing to play host to a company that
operates torture flights.”
At a press conference today, representatives of the 75 organizations and
congregations across the state called on government officials and members of the
Global TransPark Authority Board to investigate Aero Contractors’ role in the
CIA’s abduction practice, known as the “extraordinary rendition” program.
The groups presented signatures of thousands of individuals with the same
plea.
“In addition to violating international, federal and state law, torture is
morally repugnant,” said Christina Cowger, coordinator of North Carolina Stop
Torture Now. “If Aero Contractors were suspected of trafficking in drugs
or child pornography, we are certain that our leaders would take swift action to
investigate and remove such a company from public facilities.”
The national ACLU filed a lawsuit against Aero Contractors and other
U.S.-based aviation corporations as well as former CIA Director George Tenet and
other CIA officials on behalf of Khaled El-Masri, an innocent German man who was
kidnapped and detained by the CIA in 2004. The CIA held
El-Masri incommunicado in the notorious "Salt Pit" prison in Afghanistan long
after officials realized he was innocent of any wrongdoing. Five months
after his abduction, El-Masri was deposited at night, without explanation, on a
hill in Albania. A federal district court dismissed the case after the
government intervened, arguing that allowing the case to proceed would
jeopardize state secrets. An appeal was then filed with the Fourth Circuit
Court of Appeals in Richmond, stating that allowing El-Masri to have his day in
court would not harm national security because details of his rendition have
already been made public. The appeals court upheld the dismissal of
El-Masri’s lawsuit on March 2, 2007. The ACLU and El-Masri are considering
an appeal to the United States Supreme Court.
While no U.S. official has yet been held accountable for violating El-Masri's
rights to due process and fair treatment, the government of Germany has issued
arrest warrants for at least three Johnston County employees of Aero Contractors
involved in El-Masri’s abduction.
A grassroots campaign has been underway in North Carolina since November 2005
to persuade state and Johnston County officials to investigate Aero Contractors’
participation in CIA-sponsored renditions. To date, Governor Michael
Easley, the Global TransPark Authority Board, and the Johnston County Board of
Commissioners have declined to initiate an investigation, despite repeated
warnings that criminal activities are taking place at publicly funded
airports. In October 2006, 12 members of the North Carolina House of
Representatives called on the State Bureau of Investigation (SBI) to investigate
Aero Contractors. SBI Director Robin Pendergraft declined, citing her
belief in her lack of jurisdiction as the reason. In January 2007, 22
legislators directed the call for an investigation to Attorney General Roy
Cooper.
The letter sent today to state officials and the Global
TransPark Authority Board is at: www.aclu.org/safefree/extraordinaryrendition/29253lgl20070321.html
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