Paisley Dodds
3 Irish dissidents arrested on terror suspicions
LONDON (AP) — British police say they have arrested 3 senior Irish dissidents and charged them with a range of terror offenses.
Northern Irish police said the three men were charged Friday with offenses such as conspiracy to murder, conspiracy to cause an explosion, preparation of terrorist acts and collecting information of use to terrorism. The men were arrested in Lurgan, County Armagh, Northern Ireland on Monday as part of a “proactive investigation” into dissident republican terrorist activity.
A British official says the operation was intelligence-led but is not thought to be connected to the Olympic torch relay, which is due to pass through northern Ireland next week. It also is not believed linked to the London Olympics or Queen Elizabeth II’s Jubilee celebrations.
The official spoke on condition of anonymity in line with government policy.
The men will appear in court Saturday.
UK Spies Will Face Criminal Inquiry Over Libya
FILE- Binyam Mohamed, 30, foreground, a British resident freed from Guantanamo Bay prison returns to Britain a free man in this file photo dated Monday Feb. 23, 2009, as he leaves RAF Northolt in west London, after nearly seven years in U.S. captivity. British spies escaped immediate criminal charges over torture complicity Thursday, Jan 12, 2012 but the country's top prosecutor ordered a new investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi's regime led to the torture or rendition of Libyans. Prosecutors have been investigating claims of mistreatment by detainees who were eventually sent to the United States prison in Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the torture allegations come from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation. (AP Photo/Sang Tan, FILE)(Credit: AP) LONDON (AP) — Britain’s spy agencies will face a criminal investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi’s regime led to the torture or rendition of two Libyan men and their families, authorities announced Thursday.
A criminal inquiry was launched in 2008 when a former Guantanamo Bay detainee alleged that intelligence agencies were complicit in his torture. The inquiry later expanded to include claims by two Libyans who accused intelligence agents of sharing sensitive information with Gadhafi’s regime.
Continue Reading CloseUK Spies Will Face Criminal Inquiry Over Libya
FILE- Binyam Mohamed, 30, foreground, a British resident freed from Guantanamo Bay prison returns to Britain a free man in this file photo dated Monday Feb. 23, 2009, as he leaves RAF Northolt in west London, after nearly seven years in U.S. captivity. British spies escaped immediate criminal charges over torture complicity Thursday, Jan 12, 2012 but the country's top prosecutor ordered a new investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi's regime led to the torture or rendition of Libyans. Prosecutors have been investigating claims of mistreatment by detainees who were eventually sent to the United States prison in Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the torture allegations come from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation. (AP Photo/Sang Tan, FILE)(Credit: AP) LONDON (AP) — Britain’s spy agencies will face a criminal investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi’s regime led to the torture or rendition of two Libyan men and their families, authorities announced Thursday.
A criminal inquiry was launched in 2008 when a former Guantanamo Bay detainee alleged that intelligence agencies were complicit in his torture. The inquiry later expanded to include claims by two Libyans who accused intelligence agents of sharing sensitive information with Gadhafi’s regime.
Continue Reading CloseUK Spies Will Face Criminal Inquiry Over Libya
FILE- Binyam Mohamed, 30, foreground, a British resident freed from Guantanamo Bay prison returns to Britain a free man in this file photo dated Monday Feb. 23, 2009, as he leaves RAF Northolt in west London, after nearly seven years in U.S. captivity. British spies escaped immediate criminal charges over torture complicity Thursday, Jan 12, 2012 but the country's top prosecutor ordered a new investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi's regime led to the torture or rendition of Libyans. Prosecutors have been investigating claims of mistreatment by detainees who were eventually sent to the United States prison in Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the torture allegations come from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation. (AP Photo/Sang Tan, FILE)(Credit: AP) LONDON (AP) — Britain’s spy agencies will face a criminal inquiry into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi’s regime led to the torture or rendition of two Libyan men and their families, authorities announced Thursday.
A criminal investigation was launched in 2008 when a former Guantanamo Bay detainee alleged that intelligence agencies were complicit in his torture. The inquiry later expanded to include claims by two Libyans who accused intelligence agents of sharing sensitive information with Gadhafi’s regime.
Continue Reading CloseUK Spies Will Face Criminal Inquiry Over Libya
FILE- Binyam Mohamed, 30, foreground, a British resident freed from Guantanamo Bay prison returns to Britain a free man in this file photo dated Monday Feb. 23, 2009, as he leaves RAF Northolt in west London, after nearly seven years in U.S. captivity. British spies escaped immediate criminal charges over torture complicity Thursday, Jan 12, 2012 but the country's top prosecutor ordered a new investigation into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi's regime led to the torture or rendition of Libyans. Prosecutors have been investigating claims of mistreatment by detainees who were eventually sent to the United States prison in Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the torture allegations come from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation. (AP Photo/Sang Tan, FILE)(Credit: AP) LONDON (AP) — Britain’s spy agencies will face a criminal inquiry into claims that intelligence shared with Moammar Gadhafi’s regime led to the torture or rendition of two Libyan men and their families, authorities announced Thursday.
A criminal investigation was launched in 2008 when a former Guantanamo Bay detainee alleged that intelligence agencies were complicit in his torture. The inquiry later expanded to include claims by two Libyans who accused intelligence agents of sharing sensitive information with Gadhafi’s regime.
Continue Reading CloseUK Spies Won’t Face Criminal Charges For Torture
LONDON (AP) — Agents working for Britain’s spy agencies won’t face criminal charges over their alleged complicity in the mistreatment of former Guantanamo detainees, the country’s top prosecutor said Thursday.
They may, however, still face civil action from victims who say the British government passed on information about them to their foreign captors accused in their mistreatment. None of the British agents were accused of directly torturing or mistreating detainees.
Prosecutors have been investigating allegations of ill treatment of detainees who eventually were sent to the U.S. prison in Guantanamo, Cuba. Most of the torture allegations come from terror suspects who were either initially held in Pakistan and Afghanistan, or sent to other countries such as Morocco for interrogation.
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