NATO suspends Afghan jail transfers over torture fears

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The international force in Afghanistan has suspended the transfer of prisoners to some Afghan jails following allegations of torture in an as-yet unpublished UN report, NATO confirmed Wednesday.
The move comes after the report by the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan (UNAMA) claimed some prisoners were beaten with rubber hoses and threatened with sexual assault at the prisons, the BBC reported.
Eight jails run by Afghan intelligence service the National Directorate of Security (NDS) and the Afghan police were allegedly involved, the BBC said.
“With appropriate caution, ISAF has taken the prudent measure to suspend detainee transfer to certain facilities until we can verify the observations in a pending UNAMA report,” a NATO spokesman said in a statement.
The International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) is the 140,000-strong, NATO-led military force in Afghanistan which is fighting the Taliban-led insurgency.
The NATO spokesman said he could not confirm the nature of the allegations as he had not seen the report or been given details of its contents.
A spokesman for UNAMA was not immediately available for comment.
When alleged Afghan insurgents are detained by international forces, they are increasingly passed on to the Afghan justice system although it is thought the claims relate to all prisoners, including ordinary criminals.
Reports earlier this month said the US had delayed handing control of the giant Parwan Detention Centre near the Bagram Airfield military base north of Kabul to Afghan officials until at least 2014 from a previous deadline of 2012.
The Washington Post cited anonymous US officials saying the delay was linked to concerns about the capacity of Afghan officials to cope and fears that dangerous insurgents could slip through the net.