Nearly 500 Taliban escape in huge Afghan jail break

Taliban said it was behind jail break and that all of those who escaped were members of the militant organisation.


Afp April 25, 2011
Nearly 500 Taliban escape in huge Afghan jail break

KABUL: Almost 500 Taliban prisoners have escaped from Kandahar prison in southern Afghanistan through a tunnel hundreds of metres long, officials said Monday.

The Taliban said it was behind the huge jail break and that all of those who escaped were members of the militant organisation.

"A tunnel hundreds of metres long was dug from the south of the prison into the prison and 476 political prisoners escaped last night," said prison director General Ghulam Dastageer Mayar.

The acting police chief of Kandahar, Shair Shah Yousufzai, also confirmed the escape, saying: "Last night some political prisoners broke out of the prison and have escaped."

Taliban spokesman Yousuf Ahmadi said the militants were responsible for the mass break-out.

"Prisoners dug a 360-metre-long tunnel to the south of the prison. "They started getting out of the prison at 11:00 pm (1830 GMT) last night and by early morning today, 541 prisoners escaped the prison," he said.

"They all have made it safe to our centres and there was no fighting."

Ahmadi said that 106 were Taliban commanders while the rest were footsoldiers.

The Taliban are known to exaggerate their claims. The jail break is the second major escape in three years from Kandahar prison. In 2008, around 1,000 prisoners including members of the Taliban escaped after the Taliban used a truck bomb to blow open the gates. A statement from the Kandahar provincial governor's office insisted that "a number" of the prisoners had since been recaptured without giving precise figures. It added that a search was under way for the rest of the escapees. The NATO-led International Security Assistance Force (ISAF) said it was on standby to provide assistance if requested by Afghan officials. "We have no involvement at this point," said ISAF spokesman Major Michael Johnson in Kabul. "If we're asked to assist in any capacity, we would certainly be standing by to do that." Kandahar is seen as the birthplace of the movement and the city and surrounding area is scene of some of the worst fighting in Afghanistan.

The police chief of Kandahar was killed by a Taliban suicide bomber dressed in police uniform 10 days ago, dealing a serious blow to security in the province. There are around 130,000 international troops in Afghanistan, two-thirds of them from the United States, battling the Taliban and other insurgents. Limited withdrawals from seven relatively peaceful areas, only one of which is in southern Afghanistan, are due to start in July ahead of the planned end of foreign combat operations in 2014. But senior US officials are increasingly stressing the importance of longer-term relations between it and Afghanistan, while warning that the Taliban could still launch some of its worst attacks.

COMMENTS (5)

syed | 13 years ago | Reply Guys Guys Open your eyes ..This is all as per CIA strategy ..Do you think 100 metre tunnel which will take years to dig with 400 people go unnoticed..It was deliberately allowed .. These prisoners were all mid level taliban commanders who were captured who didnt do suicide or martyr as per taliban idelogy .. These middle level commanders will trace back the way to mullah omar in pakistan and it is all watched by GORGON surveillance cameras up in sky and drones will take out Mullah omar ..This is ambitious plan which i guess has been hatched...Second ,mullah omar would have trained young talibans to fight coalition forces and mid level commanders will be very unhappy as their roles were taken over and I see a internal conflict happening.. Plus Mullah omar would have suspicion on the incoming midlevel commanders as spies of US and this will all lead to internal fighting ...More drama guaranteed..
John | 13 years ago | Reply If I were an American commander, I would have implanted a radio transmitter capsules in these prisoners during their time of confinement. So when they escape, one would know all their movements and contacts and hide out ! Anyone willing to bet that these escapees are not traceable, now? In case you guys are wondering, scientists do these approaches to trace rats and talibans are not different from rats.
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