Karzai pardoned drug dealers, says cable

November 30, 2010 05:17 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 05:27 am IST - KABUL

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R) shakes hands with Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai in Beijing March 25, 2010. REUTERS/Feng Li/Pool (CHINA - Tags: POLITICS)

Chinese Premier Wen Jiabao (R) shakes hands with Afghanistan's President Hamid Karzai in Beijing March 25, 2010. REUTERS/Feng Li/Pool (CHINA - Tags: POLITICS)

A secret diplomatic cable released on Tuesday by WikiLeaks says Afghan President Hamid Karzai freed dangerous detainees and pardoned suspected drug dealers because they had connections to powerful figures.

The cable, which supports the multiple allegations of corruption within the Karzai government, said that despite repeated rebukes from U.S. officials in Kabul, the president and his attorney general authorised the release of detainees.

“Both authorise the release of detainees pre-trial and allow dangerous individuals to go free or re-enter the battlefield without ever facing an Afghan court,” said the cable written on Aug. 6, 2009 by Frank Ricciardone, deputy U.S. ambassador to Afghanistan.

Mr Karzai’s spokesman Waheed Omar did not immediately respond to a request for comment. He said on Monday that the release of documents would not strain U.S.-Afghan relations.

The cable said that in April 2009 Mr Karzai pardoned five Afghan policemen caught with 273 pounds (124 kilograms) of heroin because they were related to two heroic figures of the Afghan civil war fought in the mid-1990s.

The policemen were tried, convicted and each was sentenced to 16 to 18 years in prison, but Mr Karzai “pardoned all five of them on the grounds that they were distantly related to two individuals who had been martyred during the civil war,” the cable said.

According to the cable, Mr Karzai also tampered with the narcotics case of Haji Amanullah, the son of a wealthy businessman and one of the president’s supporters.

“Without any constitutional authority, Karzai ordered the police to conduct a second investigation which resulted in the conclusion that the defendant had been framed,” Mr Ricciardone wrote.

He wrote that intelligence reports indicated that Mr. Karzai also was planning to release Ismail Safad, a drug trafficker sentenced to 19 years in jail. Safad was a priority target for the U.S. Drug Enforcement Agency who was arrested in 2005 with large quantities of heroin and weapons.

Mr Abdul Makhtar, deputy director of the Afghan prison department, said Safad was still incarcerated at Pul-i Charkhi prison, the main detention facility in Kabul.

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