A general from the United Arab Emirates accused of the torture of British citizens has been elected as the new president of Interpol, the global law enforcement agency.
Major General Ahmed Naser al-Raisi, inspector general at the UAE's interior ministry, was elected on Thursday for one four-year term during the group's annual General Assembly in Istanbul.
His election comes despite being accused by human rights groups of involvement in torture, kidnappings and arbitrary detentions in the UAE.British academic Matthew Hedges, said he was detained and tortured between May and November 2018 in the UAE, after he was arrested on false charges of espionage during a study trip.
He has sued four UAE officials - including Al-Raisi - for £350,000 in damages after being held in ankle cuffs, denied sleep and fed a cocktail of drugs.
The academic is backed by fellow Briton, Ali Issa Ahmad, 28, a football fan imprisoned in the UAE in 2019 after wearing a shirt in the colours of Qatar, UAE's rival neighbouring country, to a match.
Mr Ahmad, a security guard, claimed he was electrocuted, burned and stabbed.
In total, Al-Raisi is accused of torture and has criminal complaints against him in five countries, including in France, where Interpol has its headquarters, and in Turkey, where the election is taking place.
The decision follows generous funding by the United Arab Emirates for the Lyon, France-based body and accusations Abu Dhabi has abused Interpol's system of so-called 'red notices' for wanted suspects to persecute political dissidents.
Raisi was elected following three rounds of voting during which he received 68.9 percent of votes cast by member countries, Interpol said in a statement.
He will take on a largely ceremonial and voluntary role for a four-year term, while Interpol Secretary General Juergen Stock handles day-to-day management of the organisation. Stock was given a second five-year term in 2019.
Raisi has run a slick campaign for the presidential post, travelling the world to meet politicians and government officials and boasting academic degrees from the UK and the US and years of experience of policing.
In a opinion piece for the government-run newspaper in Abu Dhabi, he said he wants to 'modernise and transform' Interpol, drawing on 'the UAE's role as a leader in tech-driven policing and a bridge builder in the international community'.
The vote for president was being closely watched since the first-ever Chinese president of the body, Meng Hongwei, vanished midway through his four-year term on a return trip to China in 2018.
It subsequently emerged that he had been detained, accused of bribery and other alleged crimes.
The international law enforcement body also said Valdecy Urquiza, of Brazil, was elected to the post of vice president for the Americas, while Garba Baba Umar, of Nigeria, was elected vice president for Africa.
It was suggested that Al-Raisi's endorsement 'would send a signal to other authoritarian governments' that using Interpol to pursue critics abroad 'is okay'.
It is feared the practice of giving out so-called 'red notices' for wanted suspects will be abused to persecute political dissidents rather than capture war criminals or terrorist fugitives under his leadership.
Only the Czech Republic's Sarka Havrankova - a veteran officer overseeing the country's international cooperation in police matters - stood against Al-Raisi.
'The election of General Al-Raisi would undermine the mission and reputation of Interpol and severely affect the ability of the organisation to carry out its mission effectively,' three European Parliament members wrote in a letter dated November 11 to European Commission President Ursula Von der Leyen.
While the position of president is symbolic, endorsement of the general by the group's 195 members 'would send a signal to other authoritarian governments' that using Interpol to pursue critics abroad 'is okay', said Edward Lemon, an assistant professor specialising in transnational repression at Texas A&M University.
In October 2020, 19 NGOs, including Human Rights Watch, expressed concern about the possible choice of Raisi, who they described as 'part of a security apparatus that continues to systematically target peaceful critics'.
Complaints of 'torture' were filed against the general in recent months in France and Turkey, which is hosting the assembly in Istanbul.
Mr Hedges, one of the complainants, said he was detained and tortured between May and November 2018 in the United Arab Emirates, after he was arrested on false charges of espionage during a study trip. In papers filed at the High Court in London back in May, Mr Hedges claimed damages against Al-Raisi and three other officials for assault, false imprisonment and psychiatric injury.
Mr Hedges, originally from Exeter, was sentenced to life imprisonment but was pardoned by the nation's president just days later.
He has previously described how he was questioned for up to 15 hours a day and forced to wear ankle cuffs during his ordeal.
The Durham University PhD student has also said he faced sleepless nights, PTSD and was reliant on a cocktail of drugs that were fed to him in jail.
According to court documents, Mr Hedges is expecting to recover between £200,000 and £350,000 in damages.
The UAE has previously said Hedges had not been subjected to any physical or psychological mistreatment during his detention.
In another complaint, lawyers for the Gulf Centre for Human Rights accuse the Emirati general of 'acts of torture and barbarism' committed against government critic Ahmed Mansoor.
Mansoor has been detained since 2017 in a four-square-metre (43-square-foot) cell 'without a mattress or protection against the cold' and 'without access to a doctor, hygiene, water and sanitary facilities', the lawyers said.
These complaints have not resulted in any formal proceedings against Al-Raisi.
Interpol Secretary General Jurgen Stock, who handles day-to-day management of the organisation, told journalists he was 'aware of these accusations, which are currently an issue between the parties involved'.
'It will be on Thursday the role of the member countries of Interpol to decide' on whether Raisi should get the role, said Stock, who was given a second five-year term in 2019.