This appears to have flow below the radar in the New Zealand media apart from a small mention on Radio NZ's website.
Spy
Watchdog Launches Probe Into New Zealand’s Links to CIA Torture
New
Zealand's spy watchdog has launched an investigation aimed at
determining if the country had any connection to the Central
Intelligence Agency's notorious detention and interrogation program
5
November, 2015
The
US Senate Intelligence Committee report, released in December
2014, redacted the names of a number of countries that were
involved in the torture and inhumane treatment of detainees.
Cheryl
Gwyn, inspector-general of intelligence and security, wants
to find out if New Zealand is among those countries.
"I
identified a public interest in inquiring into whether New
Zealand's intelligence agencies and personnel knew or were otherwise
connected with or risked connection to the activities
discussed in the US Senate Report," she wrote in her
annual report released Wednesday.
She
cautioned that the inquiry "does not suggest or presuppose"
any New Zealand involvement in the CIA's brutal rendition
activities between 2001 and 2009.
But
security analyst Paul Buchanan believes otherwise.
"She's
opened a can of worms here because there was no reason for her
to open this inquiry unless she saw something," Buchanan
told Radio New Zealand.
Gwyn
also announced that she has developed a "formal internal policy
for handling protected disclosures, or 'whistleblowing, '"
and is trying to get the country's intelligence agencies
to adopt it.
"The
Edward Snowden disclosures demonstrate how critical it is to have
a clear path, with appropriate protections, for disclosing
information about suspected wrongdoing within an
intelligence and security agency," she said in a statement.
The
CIA detained terror suspects at so-called "black sites"
around the world, where they were subjected to brutal
interrogation methods, including prolonged sleep deprivation,
beatings and water torture.
Article from the Intercept. This appears to have flow below the radar in the New Zealand media apart from a small mention on Radio NZ's website.
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