Still working to recover. Please don't edit quite yet.

North Carolina Stop Torture Now!

From Anarchopedia
Jump to: navigation, search
An article on this subject was deleted on Wikipedia:
Wikipedia:Articles for deletion/
North Carolina Stop Torture Now!

WP administrators can restore the edit history
of this page upon request
WP+
DEL

North Carolina Stop Torture Now! is now affiliated with Stop Torture Now.[1] Blackwater Watch (WP) (now known as Xe Watch to match the change in company name) was derived from NCSTN.[2]

On May 31, 2005, evidence of Aero Contractors' role as Torture Taxis became world news with the New York Times story on Aero Contractors Ltd., civilian aviation companies operating effectively as mercenaries, in that they are a private company facilitating military and Central Intelligence Agency operations. In response to the operations transportation operating out of their local airfield, North Carolina volunteers organized a group to protest and inform the public and lawmakers.[3]

The group worked to pass a bill in North Carolina to prohibit torture flights, but a limp response by the legislature led to the legislation being shelved. Equally tepid was the press coverage given to their efforts, with a notable exception. Appropriately, it was Democracy Now! that broadcast the story of one of their many demonstrations, an attempt to make a citizens' arrest of [4]

"North Carolina Activists Target Aero Contractors Over Rendition Flights"
Here in this country, members of the group North Carolina Stop Torture Now are heading to the offices of Aero Contractors today to make a citizens arrest of three executives. Aero Contractors has been closely connected to the CIA’s extraordinary rendition program and was involved in the kidnapping and torture of German citizen Khaled El-Masri. In January, German prosecutors issued arrest warrants for at least three employees of Aero Contractors involved in the El-Masri case.


The name Torture Taxi came from the book of the same name by A.C. Thompson and Trevor Paglen, documenting the CIA's extraordinary rendition program. (2006) Torture Taxi, Melville House Publishing.


Aero Contractors

Aero Contractors Ltd., a private charter company based in Smithfield, North Carolina, is said to provide discreet air transport services for the Central Intelligence Agency.

The company was founded in 1979 by the late Wikipedia:Jim Rhyne, a former pilot with Air America. The company has 26 planes and 79 employees and operates from the tiny Johnston County Airport.

On May 31, 2005, the New York Times reported that the company was heavily involved in Wikipedia:extraordinary rendition, the transport of terrorism suspects to countries where they can be interrogated to extract information. An Aero Contractors plane was used in the transport of Wikipedia:Khalid El-Masri, a German citizen who was pulled from a bus on the Wikipedia:Serbia-Macedonia border and held for three weeks. He was drugged and beaten before being flown to Wikipedia:Afghanistan on a Wikipedia:Boeing Business Jet operated by Aero Contractors. El-Masri was released after five months.[5]

Aero Corporations allegedly operates under several different shell companies, including Wikipedia:Stevens Express Leasing, Inc., Wikipedia:Premier Executive Transport Services, Wikipedia:Aviation Specialties, Inc., and Wikipedia:Devon Holding and Leasing, Inc. [6]

A book published in September 2006, Wikipedia:Torture Taxi: On the Trail of the CIA Rendition Flights [7] includes many details about Aero Contractors' involvement in Wikipedia:extraordinary rendition.

Pilots alleged to work for Aero Contractors

Links to Air America

There are numerous small links between Aero and Air America. The founder of Aero, Jim Rhyne, was chief pilot for Air America in the 1970s. Jim Rhyne died in early 2000 and there is little written about who is now in charge of operations.

The road on which Aero’s hangar is located is called Wikipedia:Charlie Day Memorial Highway. Charlie Day was a mechanic for Air America [12]


Torture Taxi

Torture Taxi: On the Trail of the CIA’s Rendition Flights is a 2006 book by Wikipedia:A.C. Thompson and Wikipedia:Trevor Paglen documenting the CIA's (WP) extraordinary rendition (WP) program.[13]

The authors note the discovery of the program's means of transportation, Wikipedia:rendition aircraft, by aviation enthusiasts, who spotted discrepancies in the flights of four aircraft, and correlations between their unusual flight patterns and the list of sites reputed to be the destination for ghost detainees (WP).[14]

See also


External links

Portions of this article were taken from "Aero Contractors Ltd.", at Wikipedia:SourceWatch, a wikiproject of the Wikipedia:Center for Media & Democracy which is licensed under the Wikipedia:GFDL. The list of original authors and the article's edit history can be viewed here. Wikipedia:de:Aero ContractorsWikipedia:eo:Aero Contractors

Citations

External links

Template:poli-book-stub