Europe's top human rights court imposed the penalty against Poland, setting a Saturday deadline.
It irks many in Poland that their country is facing legal repercussions for the secret rendition and detention program which the CIA operated under then-President George W. Bush in several countries across the world after the 9/11 attacks.
So far no US officials have been held accountable, but the European Court of Human Rights has shown that it doesn't want to let European powers that helped the program off the hook.
The Polish Foreign Ministry said today that it was processing the payments. However, neither Polish officials nor the US Embassy in Warsaw would say where the money is going or how it was being used.
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For now, it remains unclear how a European government can make payments to two men who have been held for years at Guantanamo with almost no contact to the outside world. Even lawyers for the suspects were tight-lipped, though they said the money would not be used to fund terrorism.
"I think we shouldn't pay, we shouldn't respect this judgment," Waszczykowski said. "This is a case not between us and them it's between them and the United States government."
The European Court of Human Rights ruled last July that Poland violated the rights of suspects Abu Zubaydah and Abd al-Rahim al-Nashiri by allowing the CIA to imprison them and by failing to stop the "torture and inhuman or degrading treatment" of the inmates.