U.S. closes Bagram prison, says no more
detainees held in Afghanistan
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[December 11, 2014]
By Frank Jack Daniel
KABUL (Reuters) - The United States said
on Thursday it had shut its last detention facility in Afghanistan and
no longer had custody of detainees there, closing a much-criticized
chapter in Washington's fight against Islamic extremism.
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The U.S. Defense Department said it had recently transferred the
last detainees from Bagram Airfield north of the capital, Kabul. It
closed the prison there on Dec. 10, a day after a Senate report
detailed abuse at a secret CIA prison in Afghanistan.
The U.S. embassy in Kabul said the closure decision was linked to a
deadline to end the detention program in Afghanistan this year, not
to the Senate report.
"The Government of Afghanistan will be responsible for all detention
facilities," from Jan. 1, an embassy spokesman said.
Foreign prisoners at the various sites in Bagram, often compared to
Cuba's Guantanamo Bay jail, were given no trials, facing only review
boards staffed by U.S. military officers. At its peak, the Bagram
prison held hundreds of detainees.
A U.S. court found two adult detainees had been beaten to death at
Bagram in 2002. The U.S. government said such cases of abuse were
rare.
The last few weeks have seen a flurry of transfers from Bagram,
including a top Pakistani Taliban militant returned to Pakistan this
week. Tunisian detainee Redha al Najar was placed in Afghan custody
on Tuesday, his lawyer said.
Najar, one of the longest-serving detainees of the U.S. "war on
terror", was captured as a suspected bodyguard of Osama Bin Laden in
May 2002.
He and another Tunisian, who lawyer Tina Foster said was also
transferred to Afghan custody, received harsh treatment at a secret
CIA facility that the intelligence agency described as a "dungeon"
in the Senate report.
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Lawyers in Pakistan for some of the detainees said they sought a
full list of those who had been moved recently.
Pakistani citizen Kamil Shah, released without trial after five
years in U.S. custody in Afghanistan from 2004, when he was 16, said
he was beaten by U.S. personnel during his stay in Bagram.
"I was in isolation for 11 months," said Shah, who was among some
2,500 juveniles the United Nations identified as having been
detained in Afghanistan, Iraq and Guantanamo Bay by the United
States since 2001.
"I wish I could fight a legal case on behalf of all innocent
Pakistanis who were in prison and tortured," Shah told Reuters in
Pakistan on Wednesday.
(Additional reporting by Katherine Houreld; Writing by Frank Jack
Daniel; Editing by Clarence Fernandez)
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