CIA probe must go to highest level – UN rights boss

GENEVA, (Reuters) – The U.S. prosecutor’s  investigation into alleged criminal CIA interrogation techniques  must go right to the top political level, the chief U.N. rights  official said yesterday.

U.N. High Commissioner for Human Rights Navi Pillay, 67, in  a wide-ranging interview with Reuters, urged European and other  countries to resettle Guantanamo detainees so that President  Barack Obama can close the U.S.-run prison in Cuba by year-end.
She also called for credible investigations into killings of  journalists and aid workers in Russia and voiced concern at the  fate of detainees arrested in Iran in post-election protests.

The former United Nations war crimes judge, who marks her  first year in office next Tuesday, said she has used an  “instinctive” blend of quiet diplomacy and public condemnation  to highlight violations worldwide.

The U.S. Justice Department named a special prosecutor this  week to investigate CIA interrogation techniques used on  terrorism suspects after the Sept. 11 attacks on the United  States under then-President George W. Bush.

“Whenever people come under the jurisdiction of the United  States, the United States has to be seen to be upholding the  very high standards that they claim for their own citizens,”  Pillay told Reuters in her office overlooking Lake Geneva.

Any torture or death inflicted on suspects held by U.S.  authorities in places including Bagram detention centre in  Afghanistan should be part of this investigation, she said.

Asked whether it should go beyond establishing the criminal  liability of CIA interrogators, Pillay replied: “That is  international law on accountability — that you do not stop at  the foot soldiers, you go right up to the ultimate authority  that is legally responsible.”

“And these would include those who devised the policy, those  who ordered it,” said Pillay, a Tamil from South Africa.

Former U.S. Vice-President Dick Cheney, a vocal defender of  the Bush administration’s security policies, has said  intelligence obtained from harsh interrogation techniques had  saved lives. [ID:nN25208112]

Pillay said she had pressed Sweden and Switzerland to accept  Guantanamo inmates who cannot return home. “The quicker that  European and other countries help President Obama to close  Guantanamo, the better for the human rights of the detainees.”

She expected Washington to play a significant role in the  U.N. Human Rights Council — where it has taken up a seat for  the first time.

But she said she was trying to overcome “regional bloc  voting” in the 47-member forum where some states vote together  to shield their friends from censure.