The US and Afghanistan signed an agreement on Friday on the transfer of a major US-run detention center to Afghan authorities, improving the prospects of a deal allowing long-term US involvement in the country.
The Strategic Partnership Agreement, which Washington and Kabul have been discussing for over a year, will be the framework for US involvement in Afghanistan beyond 2014, when the last foreign combat troops are due to leave Afghanistan.
Afghan Minister of Defense General Abdul Rahim Wardak, who signed the deal to hand over the prison at Bagram airbase, said an Afghan general would soon be appointed to take charge of it. The transfer would be completed in about six months.
Photo: AFP
“The signing of this memorandum is an important step forward in our Strategic Partnership negotiations,” said General John Allen, commander of the US forces in Afghanistan, at the ceremony.
“It is yet another example of the progress of transition and our efforts to ensure that Afghanistan can never again be a safe haven for terrorists,” he said.
In what appeared to be a compromise, the agreement states that the US has veto power over which detainees could be released from Bagram, which is believed to hold many suspected Taliban fighters.
Ties between Washington and Kabul have been heavily strained for weeks after copies of the Koran, the Muslim holy book, were burned at Bagram by US soldiers.
Widespread protests erupted in which 30 people were killed. Afghan forces turned their weapons on US soldiers, killing six.
Afghanistan wants a timeline to take over detention centers and for the US and NATO to agree to stop carrying out night raids on Afghan homes as preconditions for signing an agreement with Washington.
In January, an Afghan government commission investigating abuse accusations at Bagram said inmates had reported being tortured and held without evidence. However, the commission said it had found no evidence of torture on the detainees’ bodies.
The findings came just days after Afghan President Hamid Karzai called for the facility to be handed over to Afghan control.
The decision to transfer prisoners appeared to have lifted the spirits of some Afghans, who say Western soldiers often fail to grasp their country’s religious and cultural sensitivities.
“The Afghan army and police are capable of taking control of Afghan prisoners who are in foreign detention,” said Kabul resident Feda Mohammad, 58.
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