UK envoy 'declines apology over Libya rendition claims'
The Foreign Office said Abdel Hakim Belhaj had raised the issue of an apology
Britain's senior diplomat in Tripoli declined to offer an apology during a meeting on Thursday with the man at the centre of allegations of rendition, torture, and collusion between the former government of Col Gaddafi, London and Washington.
I understand from a Libyan source at Thursday's meeting between Dominic Asquith and Abdel Hakim Belhaj, now in charge of Tripoli's military council, that Mr Belhaj raised the issue of an apology directly with the British envoy but was politely turned down.
In a brief statement the Foreign Office later confirmed that Mr Belhaj "raised this issue". "The special representative said that we take these claims very seriously." He went on to stress that a British inquiry would look carefully at these latest allegations. Most of the meeting focused on "the security situation in Tripoli and the NTC's progress in helping life in Tripoli return to normal".
I'll be writing about that security situation shortly.
"The British asked us to stop talking to the media about rendition," said my Libyan source - a request he suggested, with a smile, would probably fall on deaf ears.
~RS~q~RS~~RS~z~RS~03~RS~)



Armed and angry
US rescuers comb tornado-hit area
Striking a chord
Light relief
Law of the land
Under the hood
A novel idea?
Comment number 1.
Ghost rider8th September 2011 - 23:36
Western Countries never apologise to African or arabs countries. That why people are debating about the end of game for Muammer Gaddafi. http://mycontinent.co/revolution-Libya.php
Link to this (Comment number 1)
Comment number 2.
AGB9th September 2011 - 9:11
What absolutely stunning hypocrisy.
In one article we have numerous government officials wringing their hands over Baha Moussa's treatment at the hands of the British army
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/uk-14839925
And yet other articles on how the UK government is complicit in the 'the abduction and illegal transfer of suspected terrorists to other countries in order to torture the suspect'.
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Comment number 3.
Hooj9th September 2011 - 12:17
Mr Belhaj's must be so pleased the FO are going to take his claims "very seriously". He must be overjoyed at our positive response of "looking carefully" at his "allegations". He was there and he has rather intimate knowledge of what was done to him.
No doubt the FO, concerned he may not like us, are working behind the scenes to limit his influence in Libya's free government.
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