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Afghanistan Slams Torture in US-Run Bagram Prison

Afghanistan Slams Torture in US-Run Bagram Prison
folder_openInternational News access_time12 years ago
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Inmates in the US-run Bagram prison in Afghanistan have faced abuses including torture, beatings and other mistreatment, a government report said Saturday.
The publication of the report by the Constitutional Oversight Commission came
Only days after President Hamid Karzai ordered the transfer of the prison and its inmates to Afghan control within a month, . Karzai, who had been briefed by the commission, the report by the Constitutional Oversight Commission was made public.

Afghanistan Slams Torture in US-Run Bagram Prison
Karzai said he had been told of "many cases of violations of Afghan Constitution and other applicable laws of the country, the relevant international conventions and human rights".

However, the report provided to the media Saturday gave few details of the allegations made by prisoners in what is sometimes called the "Afghan Guantanamo", after the US military detention facility in Cuba.
"In our visit of Bagram Prison, some of the inmates complained that they were tortured", said commission chairman Gul Rahman Qazi. Prisoners had also complained of being held in prison long after they were acquitted or their prison term had come to its end.

Also, according to the report, there are legal cases against only 300 of about 3,000 detainees at Bagram, US prison officials admitted during the probe. All the rest - most of them of suspected Taliban and al-Qaeda operators - are being held without trial, as they were captured using US intelligence that was not admissible in an Afghan court.

The Afghan government investigative commission also visited a part of the detention centre run by Afghan authorities saying they had confronted "fewer cases of mistreatment there", Gul Rahman Qazi said.
"The existence of prisons run by foreigners inside Afghanistan is absolutely not allowed in our constitution," Gul Rahman Qazi said.

Afghanistan Slams Torture in US-Run Bagram Prison
The United States said Thursday the transfer of the prison to Afghan control should be handled in a "responsible" way and the two governments had been working on it for some time.

"We take seriously any charges or allegations of detainee abuse," US State Department spokeswoman Victoria Nuland claimed.
Karzai's abrupt move for an Afghan takeover within a month came amid signs of tensions with his US backers over plans by Taliban insurgents to open a political office in Qatar as a precursor to possible peace talks.
According to RT website, Medea Benjamin, co-founder of the anti-war group Code Pink, says relations between Washington and the Afghan authorities will only improve once the troops are gone.

"It looks like their own investigation has come up with allegations of abuse by the Americans who are running the prison. That shouldn't be much of a surprise because this goes all the way back to 2002, when the abuses first started coming out - in fact there were two deaths of Afghan prisoners that led to many stories about abuses in Bagram." There have been many cases or the sort reported over the last several years, Benjamin adds.

The detention facility was first built within the sprawling US military base at Bagram, north of the Afghan capital Kabul, after the US-led invasion in 2001 and the overthrow of the Taliban government.

 

Source: News Agencies, edited by moqawama.org

 

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