The Inhumane Treatment Of Prisoners In Puli Charkhi: Prisoners Should Not Be Made The Prey Of Politics
27 January 2017By Shahamat Emarat
In is with deep sadness and regret that verified reports of inhumane treatment
by foreign forces and their hireling gunmen with defenseless inmates keep
pouring out of Puli Chahrkhi, Bagram and other local prisons.
At this very moment reports, videos and pictures have been received showing
that hundreds of inmates are on hunger strike in the notorious prison of Puli
Charkhi.
It is said that the prison officials deal with the inmates in the most
barbaric way possible. They are verbally abused, tortured, not given the
allotted food or on time, are denied sunlight and basically, all their rights
as prisoners are being violated.
The inmates say that they had previously gone on hunger strike against this
barbarity. The block warden named Arif promised that their problems will be
resolved and dispatched a team to listen to our concerns. After our
representatives talked to them, they were promptly called in by Arif to his
office where members of NDS were also present. These men were handed over to
the intelligence agency and have not been heard of till this very day.
This comes as reports emerged that on the third month of the current year, a
recently appointed warden Colonel Najmuddin is preventing inmates from reading
the Holy Quran or studying any religious material. This colonel would put all
the scholars who taught inmates into solitary confinement as well as beat and
torture other inmates under various flimsy excuses.
UNAMA had also published a report – based on interviews with over 200 thousand
inmates – stating that inmates are treated inhumanely in the prisons of
Afghanistan, confessions are taken under torture and this behavior (torture)
towards prisoners has seen a 14% increase recently which violates humanitarian
law.
This abuse by the officials of the puppet Kabul administration has forced the
hands of inmates into carrying out such strikes which result in martyrdom,
bodily harm and development of mental illnesses. Last year an inmate – Hafiz
Abdul Rauf – from Qarabagh district of Ghazni lost his life under torture and
beatings in the notorious prison of Puli Charkhi.
On top of the above, inmates face similar and in some cases even worse
treatment in Nimroz, Sherbarghan, Helmand, Mazar, Kandahar, Ghazni and other
provincial prisons.
One of the most recent cases has been reported from Kandahar where the
violator of humanitarian law and one of the most notorious warlords, Gen.
Razziq and his men abducted 80 students of knowledge from religious
seminaries. Some of the students were later martyred (their bodies found in
barren deserts) while the rest are still missing.
The relatives of inmates say that judicial bodies, judges and other
high-ranking regime officials also demand huge bribes via intermediaries to
get their loved ones released. And the destitute who cannot pay the large sums
of money watch their next of kin helplessly spend years upon years in the dark
prison dungeons.
Due to the constant humiliating and inhumane treatment and the absolute
helplessness of these prisoners, many are pushed to the edge where they
inadvertently attack the prison guards. This (unarmed inmate engaging an armed
ruthless guard without thinking about the consequence) in itself proves the
worrying state in which these prisoners reside.
The Islamic Emirate has repeatedly called on the self-proclaimed mantle
holders of human rights, UNAMA, ICRC, Amnesty International and others to take
action but unfortunately human right violations and torture continues to be an
endemic in the Kabul regime prisons.
Prisoners should not be made the Prey of Politics
The Kabul regime's mistreatment of prisoners in its prisons has reached
dangerous proportions. Individuals suspected of cooperating with the
Mujahideen are arbitrarily interned and then held years without trial –
sometimes disappearing from prisoners all together to face an unknown fate.
Prisoners of the regime face malnutrition, lack of health facilities,
psychological torture and ongoing physical mistreatment. They are deprived of
the most basic of their human rights, and routinely face physical abuse.
Prisoners who have served their term continue to be locked away in prisons for
months and years and the regime refuse to reunite them with their families.
Even now there are thousands of prisoners in Bagram, Pule Charkhi and Kandahar
prisoners that have served their sentences but continue to be unlawfully
detained.
The vast majority of the regime prisoners belong to the political prisoner
categories. They have either been suspected of being members of the Mujahideen
or otherwise their family members are accused of being insurgents and thus
they are imprisoned to cause pain to their family. Government and
non-government reports suggest the many of these prisoners, particularly in
Bagram Prison, face sever mistreatment probably amounting to torture.
With the fragmentation of central authority many local commanders and warlords
have propped up private 'black site' prisons where suspects are taken away and
in most cases never heard from again. Even prisons under the regime's direct
control have been handed to cruel commanders and officials who take away
prisoners in the middle of the night without following the legal protocol and
then summarily execute them. For example in Kandahar's main prisoner Commander
Raziq's men routinely take away dozens of prisoners each night. Their murdered
bodies are then later discovered in deserts showing visible signs of torture
and physical mistreatment.
The regime perhaps thinks that by such actions they will deter their citizens
from continuing their ongoing armed jihadi campaign against injustices and
foreign occupation. They should have learned by now that if barbarity was the
way to oppress an independence-seeking nation then the Soviets would not have
been forced to withdraw from Afghanistan.
The open and persistent mistreatment of prisoners in regime prisons is
deserving of open and widespread condemnation and the failure of international
human rights organizations to take any action is a black mark in the records
of such organizations. Despite having full access to such prisons and
notwithstanding the testimony of hundreds of eye witnesses these organizations
have turned a blind eye to the systematic torture of prisoners and have failed
to live up to their lofty ideals.
These said organizations should follow their own ideals and break their
deafening silence on the torture of prisoners. These prisoners and by
extension the organizations that purport to defend the rights of prisoners
should not be made prey to politics and in consideration of their duties
should openly condemn the ongoing mistreatment of political prisoners in
Afghanistan.
©
EsinIslam.Com
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