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"We're trying to be transparent with the people of Afghanistan," said Gen. Stanley McChrystal, the commander of NATO and U.S. forces in Afghanistan, who joined the tour. "Our experience with all detention operations from 2001 has made us smarter." The visiting parliamentarians said they were surprisingly pleased by what they saw. "There are lots of rumors that Americans torture prisoners during interrogation, said Fazelalluh Mujadeddi, a lawmaker from Logar province. "That was not true. They have good living conditions and time to pray and read books." A one-way window into the small interrogation rooms showed a turbaned man conversing easily with a blond American woman, whose main task is to build a rapport with the prisoner in hopes of eliciting information. The most severe interrogation measure allowed is isolation in an individual cell, Martins said. Still, Mujadeddi said he would be fully satisfied only when the prison is in Afghan hands. "When this prison comes under Afghan control and all the cases go through the Afghan system it will be very easy to tell the difference between the innocent and the guilty," he said. A January 2011 deadline to hand over the facility has been pushed back, Martins said. The hope now is to transfer some of the holding cells to Afghan control by the end of the year and complete the rest by early 2012.
The new prison, named the Parwan Detention Facility to distinguish it from the beleaguered older prison, has been built alongside Bagram Air Field to allow the transition to happen. Eventually it will have its own entrance, separate from the base. The trials present challenges. Detainees are blocked from hearing some of the evidence against them when it is classified. It's unclear how much access lawyers and judges will have to this information. In addition, evidence can be spotty if collected in the middle of battle, and it takes time to find Afghan lawyers to take the cases. Between 20 and 30 of the detainees are not Afghans -- mostly Pakistanis
-- and it's unclear how and where they should be tried. So even as the trials start, many prisoners will still be looking to a military panel to decide their fate.
[Associated
Press;
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