UPDATED ON:
THURSDAY, FEBRUARY 21, 2008
17:20 MECCA TIME, 14:20 GMT
 
NEWS EUROPE
UK admission on rendition flights
 David Miliband said he was 'very sorry indeed' to have to correct earlier government denials [EPA]
David Miliband, the British foreign minister, has admitted two planes from the United States carrying terrorism suspects refuelled on the British island of Diego Garcia in 2002, contradicting earlier denials by the government.
Previously the government had insisted it was unaware of any British territory being used to transfer terrorism suspects outside normal extradition procedures prior to George Bush, the US president, taking office.

Washington has already admitted to using the practice known as "rendition".
US error
 
Miliband revealed details of the flights to the island in the Indian Ocean in a statement to parliament on Thursday.

"Contrary to earlier explicit assurances that Diego Garcia had not been used for rendition flights, recent US investigations have now revealed two occasions, both in 2002, when this had in fact occurred," he said.
 

"An error in the earlier US records search meant that these cases did not come to light"

David Miliband, British foreign secretary

"In both cases a US plane with a single detainee on board refuelled at the US facility in Diego Garcia," Miliband said.

Miliband said he was "very sorry indeed" to have to correct earlier government denials on the basis of new information passed to Britain by the US government on February 15.

"An error in the earlier US records search meant that these cases did not come to light," he said.

Gordon Brown, the British prime minister, said he was disappointed and that it was unfortunate that US rendition flights happened without UK knowledge.

Prisoner claims

Mark Seddon, Al Jazeera's correspondent in London, said: "The foreign minister said they are now going to trek through all records of flights just to make sure there haven't been any other errors.
 
"The big question remains as to the claims that have been made, which the CIA denies, that prisoners have been held at Diego Garcia. The claim is that prisoners have been held either on land or on vessels off the coast.
 
"There's a pretty easy way to find out. There's a British magistrate on the island. There are at least fifty police and a naval patrol. If the claims are true the government could be liable to legal action in the courts here." 

British police said last year they had found no evidence to support claims that American CIA planes transporting terrorism suspects to face possible torture in secret prisons in Europe landed illegally at British airports.

Source: Agencies
Related:
US court dismisses 'rendition' case  
(10 Oct 2007)
US court rejects 'rendition' case  
(09 Oct 2007)
Rendition trial put on hold  
(18 Jun 2007)
CIA: rendition report distorted  
(09 Jun 2007)
CIA 'spoke to Italy' over rendition  
(15 Feb 2007)
EU's CIA rendition report 'diluted'  
(13 Feb 2007)
Italy to probe CIA rendition  
(06 Dec 2006)
Gonzales defends US 'renditions'  
(01 Jul 2006)
Europe pressed over CIA rendition  
(27 Jun 2006)
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