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Karzai demands return of prisoners

Published: 10 Jun 2013 - 12:10 am | Last Updated: 01 Feb 2022 - 10:17 am


Afghanistan’s President Hamid Karzai speaks at a gathering in Kabul.

Kabul: Afghanistan President, Hamid Karzai, has demanded the return of all Afghans held prisoner by the UK military in Helmand, giving London a two-week deadline that is legally impossible for the UK to meet.

Last year, UK courts banned the government from transferring prisoners to their justice system because of alleged widespread torture in Afghan prisons.

This month, the Defence Minister, Philip Hammond, announced that Kabul and London had agreed safeguards to protect prisoners from torture, and handovers would start after three weeks.

The delay is a requirement to allow for any legal challenges to the decision, and is certain to stretch longer, as prisoners’ lawyers have said they will challenge the decision.

But Karzai has demanded prisoners’ custody by June 22. His spokesman said the British legal system should not be used as an excuse to delay the handover.

“We are living in Afghanistan and we are talking about Afghans detained on Afghan soil and held in Afghanistan. According to our laws this is a breach of sovereignty,” Aimal Faizi said. 

“The UK... is another country with its own laws and sovereignty, [which] don’t mean anything here in Afghanistan.”

His tough stance sets the stage for weeks or months of confrontation though the UK insists it is as keen to transfer prisoners as Karzai is to take their custody.

“It is the UK government’s policy to transfer UK-captured detainees into Afghan custody at the earliest opportunity. It has been the threat of UK court action that has prevented us from transferring detainees to the Afghan authorities since last November,” the British embassy said.

“We must be satisfied that they do not face a real risk of serious mistreatment or torture. As a matter of priority the UK has been working with the Afghan government to identify a safe transfer route.”

Nato has periodically halted, then resumed, transfers of prisoners to Afghan authorities over torture concerns documented by the UN. 

Kabul has conceded there was torture in some jails, but has been persistent in calling for control of Afghan prisoners in the country.

Karzai had previously focused his ire on the US forces, who held a far larger number of people in a more notorious prison attached to the Bagram airbase.

This year the US handed over the vast detention complex it had built and run. 

The UK says the men in Helmand will be sent to this jail, which is large enough to manage all stages of detention, and open to UK monitoring to ensure there are no abuses.

“The facility at Parwan includes a justice centre and is a properly resourced national facility at which investigations and prosecutions can take place. There is no need to transfer detainees to other facilities.”

But lawyers say previous agreements to keep prisoners in jails where the UK could monitor them for signs of torture were flouted by Kabul and there was nothing to suggest the latest deal had any better safeguards.

“Our client Serdar Mohammed, who brought the case which provoked the moratorium on transfers [to Afghan authorities] last November, was transferred [between Afghan jails] and then tortured in exactly the way the MoD said would be impossible in an earlier case in 2010,” said Richard Stein from the Leigh Day law firm.

“It is concerning that the current proposals for transfer do not contain an express assurance from the Afghan authorities that there will be no onward transfers, even though the MoD accepts that NDS [National Directorate of Security, the Afghan intelligence service] facilities are not safe.”

The drawdown of foreign forces means the fate of their prisoners is mostly a legacy issue. 

Almost all military operations are now with Afghan troops, who officially capture and process anyone detained during raids or elsewhere.           

  The Guardian