The court said it would rule in a few months on whether Romania knowingly allowed CIA secret prisons where torture occurred.
BUCHAREST, Romania:
The CIA paid Romania "millions of dollars" to host secret prisons, a rights lawyer said Wednesday as the European Court of Human Rights heard accusations that Romania allowed the agency to torture terrorism suspects in a secret renditions program under President George W. Bush.
Amrit Singh told the court on the opening day of the case that CIA prisons were in Romania from 2003-2005 with the government's "acquiescence and connivance," something authorities have denied.
Romanian government representative Catrinel Brumar countered that it takes more than "hints and speculation to establish the state's responsibilities." She said an investigation was ongoing.
The court said it would rule in a few months on whether Romania knowingly allowed CIA secret prisons where torture occurred, and whether it failed to prevent the torture of Singh's client.
The alleged presence of CIA secret prisons remains a sensitive subject in Romania, a strong US ally which at the time was seeking support from Washington to join NATO, something it did in 2004.
Singh told The Associated Press by telephone that Romania was "obfuscating and in denial" in its arguments.
Singh said her client, Saudi Arabian national Abd al-Rahim Al Nashiri, was shackled, sleep-deprived, subjected to loud noise and bright lights, slapped and given forced rectal feeding at a Bucharest CIA prison in 2004. He is currently in US custody at Guantanamo Bay.
She noted that his alleged mistreatment had not yielded useful information.
The US Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture was completed in 2014. It detailed the torture of prisoners and how government oversight was prevented. The report did not directly mention Romania.
Amnesty International called Wednesday's hearing a "milestone in accountability."
Amrit Singh told the court on the opening day of the case that CIA prisons were in Romania from 2003-2005 with the government's "acquiescence and connivance," something authorities have denied.
Romanian government representative Catrinel Brumar countered that it takes more than "hints and speculation to establish the state's responsibilities." She said an investigation was ongoing.
The court said it would rule in a few months on whether Romania knowingly allowed CIA secret prisons where torture occurred, and whether it failed to prevent the torture of Singh's client.
The alleged presence of CIA secret prisons remains a sensitive subject in Romania, a strong US ally which at the time was seeking support from Washington to join NATO, something it did in 2004.
Singh told The Associated Press by telephone that Romania was "obfuscating and in denial" in its arguments.
Singh said her client, Saudi Arabian national Abd al-Rahim Al Nashiri, was shackled, sleep-deprived, subjected to loud noise and bright lights, slapped and given forced rectal feeding at a Bucharest CIA prison in 2004. He is currently in US custody at Guantanamo Bay.
She noted that his alleged mistreatment had not yielded useful information.
The US Senate Intelligence Committee report on CIA torture was completed in 2014. It detailed the torture of prisoners and how government oversight was prevented. The report did not directly mention Romania.
Amnesty International called Wednesday's hearing a "milestone in accountability."
Track Latest News Live on NDTV.com and get news updates from India and around the world