American Civil Liberties Union

NEWS
>ACLU Urges United Nations to Investigate CIA's "Extraordinary Rendition" Policy (3/30/2006)

> Supreme Court Urged to Declare Guantánamo Military Commissions Illegal (3/28/2006)

> Closing Abu Ghraib Won’t End Abuse, ACLU Chief Says (3/9/2006)

> ACLU Urges House Committee to Act on Torture and Extraordinary Rendition (2/08/2006)

> Clarification Needed from Government on Comments About Innocent Victim of "Extraordinary Rendition" (12/8/2005)

> Landmark Suit Challenges Extraordinary Rendition Policy (12/6/2005)

FEATURES
Press Conference: Video clips from the December 6, 2005, event

Detention Cell: El-Masri's sketches of his cell (pdf)

Khaled El-Masri's Statement: El-Masri's account of his experiences

What Is Extraordinary Rendition? Fact sheet

Off-Site Information: Links to articles and materials on Extraordinary Rendition

TAKE ACTION:
Stop CIA Kidnapping
  and Abuse

LEGAL DOCUMENTS
El-Masri v. Tenet: Complaint filed 12/6/2005

Letter to Secretary Rice

Letter to DHS and Secretary Rice
 

Aircraft involved in CIA rendition (Photo by Toni Marimón)

The CIA is engaging in an unlawful practice –”extraordinary rendition” – abducting foreign nationals for detention and interrogation in secret overseas prisons. “Extraordinary rendition” must be stopped before more innocent victims are targeted. Americans cannot tolerate kidnappings and secret prisons.


El-Masri v. Tenet

Khaled El-Masri with two of his children

In a history-making lawsuit, the ACLU is challenging the practice on behalf of Khaled El-Masri, an entirely innocent victim of rendition who was released without ever being charged.

The lawsuit charges that former CIA Director George Tenet violated U.S. and universal human rights laws when he authorized agents to abduct Mr. El-Masri, beat him, drug him, and transport him to a secret CIA prison in Afghanistan. The corporations that owned and operated the airplanes used to transport Mr. El-Masri are also named in the case. The CIA continued to hold Mr. El-Masri incommunicado in the notorious “Salt Pit” prison in Afghanistan long after his innocence was known. Five months after his abduction, Mr. El-Masri was deposited at night, without explanation, on a hill in Albania.


Khaled El-Masri's cell (pdf)

El-Masri appears at press event via satellite feed


The United States government has yet to acknowledge its unlawful abduction and mistreatment of Mr. El-Masri. No U.S. official has been held accountable for violating Mr. El-Masri’s well-established rights to due process and fair treatment.



 
   RELATED CASES
The Lawsuit Against Rumsfeld Torture Policies

Government Documents on Torture
   INTERNATIONAL ADVOCACY
ACLU Response to HRC Request for Information on U.S. Counter-Terrorism

ACLU Report on U.S. Implementation of the Convention Against Torture (CAT)

The Meaning of Terror: Ann Beeson blogs from Amnesty International’s Global Struggle Against Torture Conference in London.

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