Showing posts with label Bagram prison. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Bagram prison. Show all posts

Thursday, October 2, 2014

US still holds up to 60 prisoners indefinitely in Bagram in Afghanistan

- While the US and Afghanistan have just signed a bilateral security agreement that will allow US and some NATO troops to remain after the end of 2014, there are still outstanding issues such as the fate of a number of prisoners still held by the US.



Journalist Jessica Donati reported to Reuters that the status of a number of foreign individuals who are in custody in a section of Bagram Air Base north of Kabul will be unclear when the present mission ends on December 31st this year. The US will not have the right to continue to hold them there after the mission ends. The identity of the prisoners is not known nor even how many they are. However, all Afghan prisoners were turned over to the Afghan authorities so they are non-Afghans. Brigadier General Patrict Reinert, the commanding general of the US Army Reserve Legal Command claims that all the prisoners are foreign nationals captured by the US around the globe. They ended up at the site near the Bagram Air Base.
An article in Rolling Stone last year went into some detail about the facility: Around 60 non-Afghan nationals are currently being kept by the U.S. at the prison near Bagram Airfield in Afghanistan – all without charge or trial – following the hand-over of around 3,000 Afghan prisoners to the Afghan government in March. Chris Rogers of the Open Society Foundations describes the facility where the prisoners are held a second Guantanamo Bay that no one has heard about. Some of the detainees might face prosecution or mistreatment if returned to their home countries. The detainees are held as quasi prisoners of war as part of the ongoing war on terror against Al Qaeda and affiliates. The theory is that they can be legally held until the war is over! While the combat mission in Afghanistan may be over no doubt the US can claim that the war against terrorism continues. However, the US will need the permission of the Afghan government to continue to keep these prisoners at Bagram
The prisoners could be moved to Guantanamo but this seems unlikely. Many are no doubt in the Bagram facility because the US wanted to avoid attention to the fact that the US is still holding people indefinitely at Guantanamo in Cuba. Sending more captured suspected terrorists to Guantanamo would simply create unwelcome publicity at a time when Obama is supposed to be trying his best to close the facility. At last count, there were still 149 detainees held at the facility. Reinert said that some of the prisoners could be transferred to the US and tried in US courts in certain situations: "If someone has committed a crime overseas that could be a crime also in the United States, a detainee could be transferred back to the United States." This might not be a popular move and there may be many cases where there would not be sufficient evidence for a conviction.
 Maryam Haq, a lawyer with the Justice Project Pakistan(JPP) wants to ensure that all Pakistani prisoners are back in Pakistan before the end of 2014. The US already quietly sent back 14 Pakistani detainees because there was no real evidence against them. The detainees do not have their own lawyers. In 2009, detainee review boards(DRBs) were set up. The panels are composed of US administrative officials and their role is simply to decided whether inmates need to be kept in custody. One detainee called them a joke and noted that the only evidence that they had against him was a document he was forced to sign. Sarah Belal, the director of JPP, said that the US had an obligation to decide what to do with these individuals by the end of 2014: “These individuals are trapped in indefinite, illegal detention. The US and other governments have the means to bring this to an end – it is time that they and the public have the will.” Perhaps the solution to the problem will be to keep the Bagram prison open with the agreement of the new Afghan government upon agreeing to make appropriate payments to Afghan authorities for the right to do so.

Monday, September 10, 2012

U.S. transfers Bagram to Afghan administration


The U.S. military has transferred control of Bagram prison to Afghan authorities. The prison will now be called Parwan detention facility.
Bagram prison houses more than 3,.000 Taliban and terrorism suspects. The transfer is part of a continuing process of transferring jurisdiction to local control before the withdrawal of most NATO forces in 2014. There was a small ceremony during the transfer apparently poorly attended by U.S. and NATO officers.
The Bagram prison has often been cited as a type of black site where prisoners have been abused. Some of the issues are discussed in a Digital Journal article earlier this year. Even now the U.S. is retaining control over some of the prisoners and reserves the right to retain and hold prisoners who are apprehended as part of their operations. Clearly, the U.S. is only allowing as much Afghan sovereignty as it is willing to cede.
For Karzai the handover is a matter of Afghan sovereignty but he has won only a partial victory on that score The U.S. is still believed to be holding hundreds more prisoners including around 50 nationals from third countries or foreign fighters as they are called. The U.S. is concerned that "high value" detainees might be released if handed over to Afghan authorities. There is still an obvious lack of trust between the U.S. and Afghan authorities. Karzai is not satisfied although he hailed the handover. The two sides are still in dispute over the status of 34 inmates in particular.
However, with Bagram already being suspected as an abuse site the retention of control of some prisoners by the U.S. worries some human rights groups. They fear that the site where prisoners are under U.S. control will become a twin to Guantanamo where suspects will be detained indefinitely without trial. There should also be concern about treatment under Afghan control as well since there have been reports of abuse by Afghans.
Colonel Robert Taradish the only U.S. official at the ceremony said:
"We transferred more than 3,000 Afghan detainees into your custody... and ensured that those who would threaten the partnership of Afghanistan and coalition forces will not return to the battlefield."
The acting Afghan Defence Minister also spoke:
"Our Afghan security forces are well trained and we are happy that today they are exercising their capability in taking the responsibility of prisoners independently and guarding the prisoners..We are taking the responsibility from foreign forces."
Bagram was once located within the Bagram military base but was moved a few miles away in 2010 and now is known as Parwan Detention Centre . The centre is about 25 miles north of Kabul the capital.


Tuesday, September 15, 2009

Obama Brings Guantanamo to Bagram

Obama's policies enrage many on the right but the same should be the case on the left. However many left oriented liberals still support Obama even though it was clear from the very first that on foreign policy Obama has been Bush lite or in Afghanistan Bush on steroids.
Obama has thrown crumbs for his leftis supporters to eagerly snatch. He promised to close Guantanamo and he issued rules against torture. But in the same breath he accepted the policy of rendition and now it is clear that he is rendering suspects to Bagram in Afghanistan. Now we have new rules that are supposed to give Bagram prisoners more rights but these rules are promulgated at the same time as the Obama administration is appealing a ruling by a federal judge that prisoners from outside Afghanistan have a right to challenge their imprisonment! Obama claims that giving prisoners these rights would be a threat to national security. Now Cheney could not have said it better.

Obama Brings Guantanamo to Bagram
by Andy Worthington, September 14, 2009


Following briefings by Obama administration officials (who declined to be identified), both the New York Times and the Washington Post reported yesterday that the government is planning to introduce a new review system for the 600 or so prisoners held at Bagram airbase in Afghanistan, which will, for the first time, allow them to call witnesses in their defense.

On paper, this appears to be an improvement on existing conditions at the prison, but a close inspection of the officials’ statement reveals that the proposed plans actually do very little to tackle the Bush administration’s wayward innovations regarding the detention of prisoners in wartime, and the officials also provided the shocking news that prisoners are currently being rendered to Bagram from other countries.

Reform at Bagram is certainly needed. Until 2007, there was, as the Post explained, “no formal process to review prisoner status,” and, as District Court Judge John D. Bates noted in April, the system that was then put in place — consisting of Unlawful Enemy Combatant Review Boards — “falls well short of what the Supreme Court found inadequate at Guantánamo” (in Boumediene v. Bush, the June 2008 ruling recognizing the prisoners’ constitutionally guaranteed habeas corpus rights), being both “inadequate” and “more error-prone” than the notoriously inadequate and error-prone review system of Combatant Status Review Tribunals that was established at Guantánamo to review the prisoners’ cases.

Revealing the chronic deficiencies of the review system at Bagram, Judge Bates quoted from a government declaration which stated that the UECRBs at Bagram do not even allow the prisoners to have a “personal representative” from the military in place of a lawyer (as at Guantánamo), and that “Bagram detainees represent themselves,” and added, with a palpable sense of incredulity:

Detainees cannot even speak for themselves; they are only permitted to submit a written statement. But in submitting that statement, detainees do not know what evidence the United States relies upon to justify an “enemy combatant” designation — so they lack a meaningful opportunity to rebut that evidence. [The government’s] far-reaching and ever-changing definition of enemy combatant, coupled with the uncertain evidentiary standards, further undercut the reliability of the UECRB review. And, unlike the CSRT process [which was followed by annual review boards], Bagram detainees receive no review beyond the UECRB itself.

In what appears to be a direct response to Judge Bates’ damning criticisms, government officials explained, as the Post described it, that:

Under the new rules, each detainee will be assigned a U.S. military official, not a lawyer, to represent his interests and examine evidence against him. In proceedings before a board composed of military officers, detainees will have the right to call witnesses and present evidence when it is “reasonably available,” the official said. The boards will determine whether detainees should be held by the United States, turned over to Afghan authorities or released.

While this checks all the boxes regarding the deficiencies identified by Judge Bates and includes the additional promise that, “For those ordered held longer, the process will be repeated at six-month intervals,” it hardly constitutes progress, as these plans essentially replicate the CSRTs at Guantánamo, which, lest we forget, were condemned as a sham process by Lt. Col. Stephen Abraham, a veteran of U.S. intelligence who worked on the tribunals. In a series of explosive statements in 2007, Lt. Col. Abraham explained that they relied on an evidentiary process that was nothing short of “garbage,” and were designed merely to rubberstamp the Bush administration’s feeble or non-existent justification for holding the majority of the men.

Hoping to fend off such criticisms, the government officials told the Post that “the review proceedings at Bagram will mark an improvement in part because they will be held in detainees' home countries — where witnesses and evidence are close at hand.”

This may be the case, but at no point in the officials’ statements was any mention made of the government’s obligations to hold prisoners seized in wartime as prisoners of war in accordance with the Geneva Conventions. In practical terms, this would not necessarily help the prisoners secure their release, because the Conventions assert that prisoners of war can be held until the end of hostilities, and at present, from the best estimates made available, prisoners are held for an average of 14 months before being transferred to Afghan custody (or, in some cases, released outright), and around 500 prisoners have left Bagram to date.

However, under Article 5 of the Geneva Conventions, if there is any doubt about the status of prisoners seized in wartime, competent tribunals must be held, close to the time and place of capture, in which prisoners are allowed to call witnesses. As I have explained at length before, these tribunals were held during every U.S. war from Vietnam onwards, but were deliberately suppressed by the Bush administration (contributing decisively to the filling of Guantánamo with men who had no connection whatsoever to any form of militancy whatsoever), and what President Obama must do, if he is intending to ensure that the United States once more embraces the Geneva Conventions, is to pledge that all prisoners seized in future will be subjected to these tribunals on capture, rather than holding versions of the CSRTs at some unspecified time afterwards.

By refusing to do so, I can only infer that he and his administration have, essentially, accepted the Bush administration’s aberrant changes regarding the detention of prisoners in wartime as a permanent shift in policy, with profound implications for the Conventions in general.

If Obama’s plan stands, any country anywhere in the world will be able to seize enemy soldiers during wartime (including U.S. soldiers, presumably), and, instead of holding competent tribunals, feel justified in holding them for an unspecified amount of time before subjecting them to innovative tribunals, which bear a resemblance to the competent tribunals, but which are, instead, clearly designed to shred Article 5 and to allow prisoners to be held until their circumstances can be explored further — and, again by inference, until they can be milked for their supposed intelligence value, with all the ominous undercurrents that phrase involves.

In the case of Bagram, a further complication is that, according to the Post, the Conventions have been shredded still further, because about 200 of the 500 prisoners who have left Bagram “have been convicted in Afghan courts, all based on evidence the United States provided.”

These fundamental assaults on the Geneva Conventions, combined with the evidence regarding the dubious relationship between the U.S. and the Afghan courts, are disturbing enough, as they demonstrate, in defiance of the claims made by government officials, that the Obama administration is only tinkering with its predecessor’s fundamental disregard for international laws and treaties.

However, the timing of the government’s announcement is also enormously suspicious because, as the Times explained, it comes “as the administration is preparing to appeal a federal judge’s ruling in April that some Bagram prisoners brought in from outside Afghanistan have a right to challenge their imprisonment.”

That ruling, which I quoted from above, was made by Judge Bates, in the cases of three foreign prisoners seized in other countries and “rendered” to Bagram, where they have languished without rights for up to six years. In April, when Judge Bates ruled on their habeas corpus appeals, he had no hesitation in granting them the right to challenge the basis of their detention through the courts because, as he explained unambiguously, “the detainees themselves as well as the rationale for detention are essentially the same.” He added that, although Bagram is “located in an active theater of war,” and that this may pose some “practical obstacles” to a court review of their cases, these obstacles “are not as great” as the government suggested, are “not insurmountable,” and are, moreover, “largely of the Executive’s choosing,” because the prisoners were specifically transported to Bagram from other locations.

As I explained at the time, it was inconceivable that the government could come up with an argument against Judge Bates’ ruling, or, indeed, that there was any justification whatsoever for doing so, because “only an administrative accident — or some as yet unknown decision that involved keeping a handful of foreign prisoners in Bagram, instead of sending them all to Guantánamo — prevented them from joining the 779 men in the offshore prison in Cuba.”

However, although Judge Bates, in a later ruling, sided with the government by refusing to grant habeas rights to an Afghan prisoner seized in the United Arab Emirates in 2002 and also rendered to Bagram, primarily because he agreed with the government’s claim that to do so would cause “friction” with the Afghan government regarding negotiations about the transfer of Afghan prisoners to the custody of their own government, the Obama administration refused to accept his ruling about the foreign prisoners and launched an immediate appeal. As a result, it is, I believe, completely justifiable to conclude that the entire rationale for introducing a new review process for all the prisoners at Bagram is to prevent the courts from having access to the foreign prisoners held there. Reinforcing this conclusion is another admission, hidden away towards the end of the Times report, in which it was noted that the officials also explained that “the importance of Bagram as a holding site for terrorism suspects captured outside Afghanistan and Iraq has risen under the Obama administration, which barred the Central Intelligence Agency from using its secret prisons for long-term detention.”

This, to put it bluntly, is terrifying, as it seems to confirm, in one short sentence, that, although the CIA’s secret prisons have been closed down, as ordered by President Obama, a shadowy “rendition” project is still taking place, with an unknown number of prisoners being transferred to Bagram instead.

The upshot of all this is disastrous for those who hoped that President Obama would not only accept but would positively embrace the opportunity to return to the laws that existed regarding the capture and detention of prisoners, before they were so comprehensively dismissed by the Bush administration. Far from reassuring the world that there are only two acceptable methods for holding people in detention — either as criminal suspects, to be put forward for trials in federal court, or as prisoners of war, protected by the Geneva Conventions — Obama has chosen instead to continue to operate outside the law, implementing Guantánamo-style tribunals at Bagram and acknowledging that he wants the U.S. courts to remain excluded because he is using Bagram as a prison for terror suspects “rendered” from around the world.

To gauge quite how disastrous this news is, imagine how former Vice President Dick Cheney is responding to it. Yes, that is indeed a smile playing over the lips of the architect of America’s wholesale flight from the law in the wake of the 9/11 attacks. “I told you so,” he mutters contentedly.

Andy Worthington is the author of The Guantánamo Files: The Stories of the 774 Detainees in America’s Illegal Prison (published by Pluto Press) and serves as policy advisor to The Future of Freedom Foundation. Visit his website at: www.andyworthington.co.uk.

Monday, February 23, 2009

Obama continues Bush policy on detainees at Bagram: indefinite detention, no legal rights.

This is from Rawstory.

So we have a sort of Bush lite in Obama. In fact it is not even very lite. Obama has also retained the practice of rendition while restricting interrogation methods. In fact he is outsourcing torture. Obama has also sided with Bush on use of the state secrets act in a recent case.
Note that even though Guantanamo is in Cuba and Bagram in Afghanistan neither country has anything to say about persons held in their territory by the US.


Despite rhetoric, Obama continues Bush policy on detainees: Indefinite detention, no legal rights
John ByrnePublished: Saturday February 21, 2009

Bagram airbase flies under the radar but will continue to operate without US lawIn a stunning departure from his rhetoric on Guantánamo Bay prison, President Barack Obama signaled Friday he will continue Bush Administration policy with regard to detainees held at a US airbase in Afghanistan, saying they have no right to challenge their detentions in US courts -- and denying them legal status altogether."This Court’s Order of January 22, 2009 invited the Government to inform the Court by February 20, 2009, whether it intends to refine its position on whether the Court has jurisdiction over habeas petitions filed by detainees held at the United States military base in Bagram, Afghanistan," Acting Assistant Obama Attorney General Michael Hertz wrote in a brief filed Friday. "Having considered the matter, the Government adheres to its previously articulated position."The move seems to be a reversal from Obama's much-trumpeted announcement to close the US prison at Guantánamo Bay, Cuba in January, in which he promised to return the United States to the "moral high ground" and "restore the standards of due process"The US Supreme Court previously ruled that it was unconstitutional to hold detainees at Guantánamo Bay without giving them access to US courts. Following that ruling, more than 200 detainees filed suit in the District Court for the District of Columbia.The Obama Administration announcement would appear to fly in the face of that ruling. The Court, while often supportive of previous Bush Administration terror policies, has strongly resisted efforts to curb its role in the legal aspect of US detention systems.Bagram prison, where approximately 600 detainees are being held without charge or even term limits on their stay, is located about 30 miles north of Kabul in a coverted Soviet Union base. The US is mulling a $60 million plan to expand the facility, which would double its current size.It's been closed to journalists and human rights activists, but open to lawyers. The lawyers, however, apparently have no recourse for their potential clients.Bagram has added more than 100 prisoners since 2005, giving it a population more than double that of the current Guantánamo Bay (245).It's uncertain whether the Supreme Court would uphold Obama's position. In the Guantanamo case, "the Court deemed the Bush administration's system for determining whether to continue holding detainees -- akin to a parole board -- was an inadequate substitute for habeas relief," Legal Times wrote Friday. "The Court also recognized that the United States exercised de facto sovereignty over the base, placing Guantánamo within its jurisdiction. But "the Court did not address Bagram, but said in some circumstances noncitizens being held in territories under U.S. control may have limited constitutional rights," Legal Times added."Yesterday's announcement that the Obama administration has not even considered departing from the very same unjust and inhumane policies of his predecessor, is an ominous sign that human rights and the rule of law are simply not a priority of this administration," the International Justice Network, who is counsel in all the cases under review, said to Raw Story in a statement. "We expected more from this President when he promised that we would not trade our fundamental values for false promises of security. Unless there is a serious reconsideration of this issue at the highest levels of the Obama government, America will not be able to put this dark chapter of our history behind us."Another detainee lawyer also bemoaned the filing."The decision by the Obama Administration to adhere to a position that has contributed to making our country a pariah around the world for its flagrant disregard of people’s human rights is deeply disappointing," the International Rights Clinic's Barbara Olshansky, who represents three Bagram detainees, told the paper. "We are trying to remain hopeful that the message being conveyed is that the new administration is still working on its position regarding the applicability of the laws of war -- the Geneva Conventions -- and international human rights treaties that apply to everyone in detention there."

Wednesday, September 17, 2008

Pentagon to expand intelligence operations at Bagram prison in Afghanistan



The U.S. is gearing up to stay in Afghanistan for the long haul. It may be however that they will be asked to leave. They will need to replace Karzai by a more pliable puppet such as Zalmay Khalilzad who is probably being groomed to run against him by the U.S. Bagram is being enlarged. Of course the Afghans have zilch to say on the matter of the U.S. imprisoning their citizens!







Pentagon to expand intel ops at U.S. prison in Afghanistan
By Peter Eisler, USA TODAY
WASHINGTON — The Pentagon plans to expand intelligence operations at its main prison in Afghanistan, records and interviews with military officials show.
Interrogators and analysts are being sought for a bigger Bagram prison scheduled to open next year. They will be hired to question prisoners and provide intelligence that can be used on the battlefield, according to contract solicitations reviewed by USA TODAY. The Army also is seeking a "trained Mullah" to conduct Islamic services for detainees and advise U.S. officials on religious issues.
The developments are the latest indication of U.S. plans for a long-term presence in Afghanistan, where the fundamentalist Muslim Taliban militants have regained strength since U.S. forces ousted them in 2001.
Originally built as a Soviet air base in the 1980s, the Bagram prison was meant to be a short-term holding site. Bagram has been a flash point in the debate over U.S. treatment of detainees. The International Red Cross has negotiated with U.S. officials about conditions and access to detainees.
After peaking at nearly 700 prisoners in 2006, the population at Bagram has hovered for the past year at its 600-prisoner capacity, according to Central Command figures provided in response to a USA TODAY inquiry.
The intelligence hires are to be in place before next summer's scheduled completion of the new detention center that will hold 1,000 prisoners, an increase in capacity by 65%.
"In 2001 … we never thought we'd still be (at Bagram) today," said Brig. Gen. Robert Holmes, deputy operations chief at U.S. Central Command, which oversees Afghanistan operations. "Now that we see this as a sustained activity, there were improvements to be made."
On Monday, the Pentagon announced that 2,000 Marines will go to Afghanistan in November to deal with the increased fighting.
The new facility and staff at Bagram will allow U.S. officials to gather more diverse intelligence from the added prisoners as more U.S. forces arrive in the country to take down Taliban strongholds, said Seth Jones, a military analyst at the RAND Corp. think tank.
"One thing we have not taken advantage of is just trying to understand what is motivating people to join the insurgency," he said.
The new $60 million facility will also include more space for detainee religious services, education programs and family visits.



Find this article at: http://www.usatoday.com/news/military/2008-09-15-Bagram-prison_N.htm



Copyright 2008 USA TODAY, a division of Gannett Co. Inc.

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