An Italian judge on 4th November convicted 23 US and two Italian secret agents for the CIA's kidnapping of an Egyptian cleric in 2003 under the covert 'extraordinary rendition' programme.
The CIA's Milan station chief at the time, Robert Seldon Lady, was sentenced to eight years in prison and the other Americans to five years, all in their absence in the landmark trial.
The two Italians were given three-year prison terms following the first trial involving the transfer of a 'war on terror' suspect by CIA operatives thought to have sent scores of people to countries known to practise torture.
The CIA chief for Italy at the time, Jeffrey Castelli, and the then head of Italian military intelligence SISMI, Nicolo Pollari, were protected by state secrecy rules, while two other American defendants benefitted from diplomatic immunity, Judge Oscar Magi said.
Prosecutor Armando Spataro hailed the verdict, saying the trial, which opened in June 2007, had demonstrated 'the truth of the investigation.'
Spataro had sought a 13-year jail term for Castelli and Pollari, who was forced to quit over the affair.
Osama Mustafa Hassan, an imam better known as Abu Omar, was snatched from a Milan street on February 17, 2003, in the operation coordinated by the CIA and SISMI.
The radical opposition figure, who enjoyed political asylum in Italy, was allegedly taken to the US air force base in Aviano, northeastern Italy, then flown to the US base in Ramstein, Germany, and on to Cairo where he says he was tortured.
The 'extraordinary rendition' programme was set up by the administration of then-president George W. Bush in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terror attacks.
The imam's captors failed to take many standard precautions, notably speaking openly on cell phones, leaving investigators to suspect that the Americans had cleared their intentions with senior Italian intelligence officials.
The rights group Human Rights Watch hailed the verdict, even though the two highest-ranking officials were not convicted.
'No one was found innocent,' noted Joanne Mariner, while lamenting those who 'got off the hook because of the Constitutional Court's overbroad interpretation of state secrecy.'
'The Italian government was found responsible for collaboratring with the CIA. It was a brave ruling for an Italian court,'
The CIA's Milan station chief at the time, Robert Seldon Lady, was sentenced to eight years in prison and the other Americans to five years, all in their absence in the landmark trial.
The two Italians were given three-year prison terms following the first trial involving the transfer of a 'war on terror' suspect by CIA operatives thought to have sent scores of people to countries known to practise torture.
The CIA chief for Italy at the time, Jeffrey Castelli, and the then head of Italian military intelligence SISMI, Nicolo Pollari, were protected by state secrecy rules, while two other American defendants benefitted from diplomatic immunity, Judge Oscar Magi said.
Prosecutor Armando Spataro hailed the verdict, saying the trial, which opened in June 2007, had demonstrated 'the truth of the investigation.'
Spataro had sought a 13-year jail term for Castelli and Pollari, who was forced to quit over the affair.
Osama Mustafa Hassan, an imam better known as Abu Omar, was snatched from a Milan street on February 17, 2003, in the operation coordinated by the CIA and SISMI.
The radical opposition figure, who enjoyed political asylum in Italy, was allegedly taken to the US air force base in Aviano, northeastern Italy, then flown to the US base in Ramstein, Germany, and on to Cairo where he says he was tortured.
The 'extraordinary rendition' programme was set up by the administration of then-president George W. Bush in the wake of the September 11, 2001, terror attacks.
The imam's captors failed to take many standard precautions, notably speaking openly on cell phones, leaving investigators to suspect that the Americans had cleared their intentions with senior Italian intelligence officials.
The rights group Human Rights Watch hailed the verdict, even though the two highest-ranking officials were not convicted.
'No one was found innocent,' noted Joanne Mariner, while lamenting those who 'got off the hook because of the Constitutional Court's overbroad interpretation of state secrecy.'
'The Italian government was found responsible for collaboratring with the CIA. It was a brave ruling for an Italian court,'
'And we agree with the prosecutors that diplomatic immunity is not meant to cover people involved in grave human rights abuses,' said Mariner, director of HRW's Terrorism and Anti-Terrorism Programme.
The trial was delayed as successive Italian governments sought to have it thrown out as a threat to national security. Defendants argued that state secrecy rules prevented them from being able to prove their innocence.
The issue went before Italy's Constitutional Court, which agreed that part of the investigation had violated state secrecy provisions but said the prosecution could use evidence obtained correctly.
Spataro earlier Wednesday rejected the court ruling, saying: 'There is no legal structure under which SISMI and the CIA could agree to carry out a kidnapping. It is absolutely against Italian law.'
The prosecutor lamented what he called the 'twisted logic' behind an operation that broke the law as well as sending a suspect to endure torture.
'This only give encourgement the multiplication of terrorists,' said Spataro, who became known for his work against the left-wing militant group the Red Brigades that was active in the 1970s. -
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