UK criticised over role in US rendition
The Intelligence and Security Committee said British agencies continued to supply intelligence to allies despite knowing or suspecting abuse in more than 200 cases.
Committee chairman Dominic Grieve said agencies knew of incidents that were "plainly unlawful".
The findings have sparked fresh calls for an independent, judge-led inquiry.
The two parliamentary reports, published following a three-year investigation, examine how far Britain's intelligence agencies were aware of the mistreatment of terrorism suspects.
(Score: 4, Insightful) by bradley13 on Sunday July 01 2018, @08:18AM
You want to make the suffering lengthy. You want to make it embarrassing, painful, and religiously offensive.
Um...why? Seriously, "making people suffer" has one primary effect: it damages you and your culture. It doesn't make their past acts go away.
If you want to prevent proven terrorists from committing horrible acts in the future, then either lock them up or execute them. What's the point in making them suffer? Vengeance? As a small child, did you enjoy pulling the legs off of insects?
Everyone is somebody else's weirdo.