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September 11, 2012

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US hands over formal control of Bagram jail to Afghan authorities

UNITED States officials handed over formal control of Afghanistan's only large-scale US-run prison to Kabul yesterday, even as disagreements between the two countries over the Taliban and terror suspects held there marred the transfer.

The handover ceremony took place at the prison next to a sprawling US airfield in Bagram, just north of Kabul. President Hamid Karzai has hailed the transfer as a victory for Afghan sovereignty.

Bagram, also known as the Parwan Detention Facility, has been the focus of controversy in the past but never had the notoriety of the prisons at Guantanamo Bay or Abu Ghraib in Iraq.

Earlier this year, the image of the prison was tarnished when hundreds of Qurans and other religious materials were taken from its library and sent to a burn pit at the military base. The event triggered scores of deadly anti-American protests across Afghanistan and led to the deaths of six US soldiers.

"We are telling the Afghan president and the Afghan people that today is a proud day," said Afghan army General Ghulam Farouk, who now heads the prison.

The US had already given Afghanistan authority over most of the 3,000 detainees held at the prison before March 9, when the countries signed a handover agreement. As some may have been released or others brought in, the prison's current detainee population under US control is not known but is thought to number in the hundreds.

The US recently suspended the transfer of new detainees apparently because of disagreements with Kabul, which has questioned the long-term detention of suspects without charges.

According to Farouk, the US had transferred 3,082 detainees but was still in the process of transferring another 600 captured after the March deal.

The US will also continues to hold about 50 non-Afghan prisoners that are not covered by the agreement on a small part of the facility that it will still administer. They are thought to include Pakistanis and other foreign nationals either captured in Afghanistan or transferred to Bagram from other wars, such as Iraq.

The disagreement is not expected to impact military operations around Afghanistan, but it is an indication of the tense relations between the US-led NATO military coalition and President Karzai.

It is also unlikely to impact the gradual handover of security responsibilities from NATO to Afghan forces. The US and its allies are drawing down their military forces in Afghanistan and hope to fully hand over control to the Afghans by the end of 2014, when most foreign troops are to leave the country.





 

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