KABUL (Reuters) - Afghanistan
will release 88 prisoners as planned even though the United States
considers them dangerous and wants them to remain in detention, the
board reviewing their cases told Reuters.
The prisoners are being held at a jail at the Bagram air base north of
Kabul. The United States only recently transferred the prison to Afghan
control after it had become a serious source of tension with the Afghan
government.
President Hamid
Karzai instructed Afghan intelligence officials to provide the review
board with more evidence against the prisoners, after the United States
said there was proof of their involvement in the killing of foreign
troops and they posed a serious threat to security.
But the head of the review board, Abdul Shakor Dadras, said the evidence did not warrant keeping the prisoners any longer.
"The documents we have seen so far provide no reason to convict them," Dadras told Reuters by telephone late on Sunday.
"Our decision is to release them as soon as possible if there is no incriminating evidence against them."
The disagreement over the prisoners is a further strain on Afghan-U.S.
relations already seriously soured by Karzai's refusal to sign a
bilateral security deal to shape the U.S. military presence after most
foreign troops leave this year.
U.S. senators in Afghanistan last week pressed the president to stop
the release, warning it would irreparably damage relations with the
United States.
The planned
release has also alarmed many senior Afghan security officials, who
often see released prisoners return to the battlefield.
Thirty percent of the prisoners had taken part in direct attacks that
killed or wounded 60 members of Afghanistan's U.S.-led NATO force.
Karzai's office did not immediately comment.
(Writing by Jessica Donati; Editing by Robert Birsel)
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