- Pul-e-Charkhi prison
Pul-e-Charkhi prison (in
Dari , زندان پل چرخی) is a largeprison inAfghanistan east ofKabul . Construction of the jail was begun in the 1970s by order of then-presidentMohammed Daoud Khan and was completed during theSoviet invasion of Afghanistan in 1979-89. The prison became notorious fortorture and other abuses after it came under the control of Afghanistan's communist government following the invasion by theSoviet Union . [ [http://ark.cdlib.org/ark:/13030/ft7b69p12h/ "Afghanistan: The Soviet Invasion and the Afghan Response, 1979-1982"] M. Hassan Kakar. Berkeley,University of California Press , 1995. ISBN 0520208935 [http://content.cdlib.org/xtf/view?docId=ft7b69p12h&chunk.id=s1.9.2&toc.depth=1&toc.id=ch09&brand=eschol Prisoners of Pul-e-Charkhi] ] Between April 1978 and the Soviet invasion of December 1979, the Afghan Communistsexecuted 27,000 political prisoners there. ["Soldiers of God: With Islamic Warriors in Afghanistan and Pakistan" by Robert D. Kaplan. Vintage, 2001. ISBN 1400030250 p.115]1978-1986
Mass grave
A communist-era mass grave, close to the Poli Charkhi prison, was discovered in December 2006 by the
NATO -ledInternational Security Assistance Force (ISAF) and is believed to hold some 2,000 bodies. [ [http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/newsdesk/IRIN/0e42c3938dbabb718723d31d3f58a239.htm "Communist era mass grave discovered hightlights need for post-war justice"] ,IRIN , December 2002] Officials of the Afghan Ministry of Information and Culture believe that the massacre took place between 1978 and 1986 when the Moscow-backed communist presidents,Nur Muhammad Taraki ,Hafizullah Amin andBabrak Karmal were in power.2001-present
Living Conditions
The living conditions of the prison have been criticized by several human rights groups. The prison had been cited as overcrowded and the living conditions as sub-par. There are eight cell blocks but only three are being used which has caused overcrowding. The prison is making room for 110 prisoners that are coming from the US prison in
Guantánamo Bay . There are also about 70 female prisoners who share the prison. In most cases, children of the female inmates live with them in the prison.Current Events
There are now 350
Taliban andal-Qaeda inmates out of the 1,300. In January 2006, seven Taliban inmates disguised themselves as visitors and escaped from the prison. In recent news, there had been an inmate takeover on February 26, 2006. A four-dayriot has led to the death of six people.An ongoing (as of 18 March) riot in mid-March 2008 resulted in a takeover of portions of the prison by inmates.
A prisoner, Abdul Rahman, had been held in Pul-e-Charkhi but was released a few days later due to threats from neighboring cell mates. Abdul Rahman had been sent to the prison for his conversion to
Christianity 15 year prior to his arrest.American expansion
The United States has repeatedly announced that it will be shutting down its
Guantanamo Bay detention camp s, inCuba .cite news
url=http://www.nytimes.com/2008/01/07/world/asia/07bagram.html?ref=asia&pagewanted=all
title=Defying U.S. Plan, Prison Expands in Afghanistan
publisher=New York Times
author=Tim Golden
date=January 7 ,2008
accessdate=2008-01-07] The Americans planned to transfer most of the captives held inextrajudicial detention in Guantanamo, and in its less well knownBagram Theater internment facility to Afghan custody.United States President Bush negotiated a tentative deal with Afghan PresidentHamid Karzai that the Afghans would accept prisoners from the Americans if the Americans expanded and modernized Afghan facilities and trained, and paid the salaries of the additional Afghan guards that would be required.The initial plan called for reducing the maximum number of men held per cell from the current eight, to just two. For security reasons every cell would be equipped with its own toilet, replacing the current insecure method of letting all the captives leave their cells and share a single toilet at the end of each cell-block.
Under this initial plan the modernization of this wing would cost $20 million USD, and would have a maximum capacity of 670 captives. However, after a tour of the facility, during its modernization, it was realized that, for cultural reason, captives could not be expected to share a toilet with another man. Afghan's cultural modesty would not allow a captive to use a toilet with another man present, cutting the capacity of the modernized facility in half.
Then, on
May 6 2007 , two American GIs,Colonel James W. Harrison Jr. andMaster Sergeant Wilberto Sabalu ,who had been part of the oversight team, were gunned down by one of the Afghan guards. This forced a delay on construction as all the guards underwent new security checks.Finally, there was controversy within the
Afghan Cabinet as to which Ministry would be responsible for the modernized part of the Prison.
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