Greece and Cyprus are among 14 EU member-states suspected of turning a
blind eye to secret CIA flights taking terror suspects to countries where they
could face torture, according to a report approved by a majority of MEPs in the
European Parliament yesterday.
The EU parliament voted to accept a resolution condemning member states who
accepted or ignored the practice, according to Athens News Agency reports.
The EU report said the U.S. had operated 1,200 flights, flying suspects on to
states where they could face torture.
The report was adopted by a large majority, with 382 MEPs voting in favor,
256 against and 74 abstaining.
A paragraph referring to Greece said that aircraft used by the CIA had made
64 stops in Greek airports. It expressed grave concerns regarding the purpose of
flights coming from or flying to countries linked to the CIA's "extraordinary
renditions" circuit, as the prisoner transfers were termed.
In the case of Cyprus, the report pointed to 57 stops at Cyprus airports of
CIA-operated planes.
It is unlikely, the report said, that European governments were unaware of
rendition activities on their territory.
European Commission for Justice Franco Frattini said the message from the
report was a need for "greater and closer Euro Atlantic cooperation," greater
cooperation with the US in the name of two principles -- "security and mutual
respect".