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CIA

CIA rendition deportee: ‘Sweden is responsible’

Ahmed Agiza, who was flown out of Sweden to Egypt by the CIA in 2001 where he was imprisoned until last week, has claimed that Sweden needs to take responsibility for what happened to him.

CIA rendition deportee: 'Sweden is responsible'
An undated file photo of Ahmed Agiza

Agiza met with several representatives of the Swedish media in Cario on the condition that he not be asked about the circumstances surrounding his 2001 forced deportation.

He, along with fellow Egyptian national Mohammed Alzery, were forcibly handed over to the CIA by Swedish security service agents as part of a so called terror suspect “rendition” operation carried out by the US spy agency.

The deportations were criticised by both the United Nations and several human rights groups.

“I see this is Sweden’s responsibility because they made the decision despite that they knew what the Egyptians would do,” Agiza told Sveriges Radio (SR).

Karlstad-resident Agiza spent almost ten years in a cell in the Tora prison in Cairo, convicted by a military court of having been a member of a terror-linked organisation.

The decision to release Agiza was made by the social democratic government in Egypt at the behest of the United States and has been welcomed by international human rights organizations.

However, he has several lasting injuries from the torture he suffered while in Egyptian prison. Among other things, his nose was broken, making it difficult for him to breath.

“I’ve been able to meet with a specialist at a centre for torture injuries to receive help. The problem is that my brain is in high gear even when I sleep,” he told TV4.

Two years ago, Agiza had his application for a Swedish residency permit denied based on secret information held by Swedish security service Säpo.

Agiza claims that he’s never been a threat.

“I’m no terrorist, I’m not some sort of security risk for Sweden,” he told Sveriges Television (SVT).

Agiza and Alzery have received 3 million kronor ($464,000) each in compensation from the Swedish state.

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NORTH KOREA

FBI offered info stolen in raid on N.Korean embassy in Madrid

The alleged leader of an armed group that broke into Madrid's North Korean embassy in February, roughing up employees and robbing computers, offered the stolen information to the FBI, a Spanish court said Tuesday.

FBI offered info stolen in raid on N.Korean embassy in Madrid
A view of the exterior of the North Korean Embassy. Photo: Google View

Adrian Hong Chang, of Mexican nationality, contacted “the FBI in New York five days after the assault to faciliate information related to the incident in the embassy,” Spain's National Court said in a statement, adding he said he had acted of his own accord.

These are the first official details to emerge from the mysterious incident on February 22nd after investigating magistrate Jose de la Mata lifted the secrecy surrounding the case.

Prior to this, media reports had merely said that a group of men had burst into the diplomatic mission, roughing up employees before making off with documents and computers.

READ MORE: Police probe strange incident at Madrid's North Korean embassy

The incident took place days before a high-stakes nuclear summit between North Korean leader Kim Jong Un and US President Donald Trump that ultimately failed to reach an accord.

According to de la Mata, two of the assailants took the embassy's commercial attache to an underground room and urged him to defect, which he refused.

They identified themselves “as members of an association of human rights movement for the liberation of North Korea.”

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