Untitled Document
The US military ran a Guantanamo Bay-type detention centre in Kosovo,
a top Council of Europe official said.
The Council of Europe's Human rights commissioner Alvaro Gil-Robles
said he had been 'shocked' by conditions at the barbed wire-rimmed centre inside
a US military base, which he witnessed in 2002.
The camp resembled 'a smaller version of Guantanamo', he told France's
Le Monde newspaper, referring to the US centre at Guantanamo Bay, Cuba, where
hundreds of terrorism suspects remain detained without trial.
Gil-Robles told the daily he had inspected the centre, located within the US
military's Camp Bondsteel in Kosovo, in 2002, to investigate reports of extrajudicial
arrests by NATO-led peacekeepers.
Gil-Robles said he had no evidence that Camp Bondsteel was linked to the alleged
CIA operations.
'But I do believe that an explanation should be given for this base in Kosovo,
as for other potentially suspect sites' in Europe, he told the paper.
Earlier this week the Council of Europe, which guarantees human rights in its
46 member states, launched an investigation into the alleged prisons.
The official leading the probe said Friday that Romania, which rights groups
have labelled a likely site for one of the secret centres, was not hosting a
large, Guantanamo-style jail.
Dick Marty told a press conference in Bucharest that he was 'convinced that
there are no Guantanamos in Romania'.
However, he did not exclude the possibility of Romania having 'small centres
with one or two detainees being kept temporarily for interrogation'.