KABUL — President Hamid Karzai’s government is accusing the U.S. and British military of operating secret detention facilities in Afghanistan, a development that could further strain relations with Western leaders.
After receiving reports about Afghan detainees at coalition bases, Karzai established a fact-finding commission to study the matter, the government said. On Tuesday, it announced that it had found six detention centers that run afoul of an Afghan law requiring all prisoners from the country be held in Afghan-run jails.
Abdul Shokur Dadras, a member of the commission, said two of the jails were overseen by British soldiers at Camp Bastion in the Helmand province, while a third jail at that base was under American military control. At Kandahar Air Field, also in the southern part of the country, three more foreign-run prisons were discovered — one controlled by American soldiers, one by the British and one managed by a joint coalition force, Dadras said.
In separate statements, Pentagon and coalition officials appeared surprised that Afghan leaders had chosen to make an issue out of the matter.
From Kabul, the U.S.-led military coalition said that “every facility that is used by coalition forces for detention is well known” by the Afghan government and is routinely monitored by the Red Cross.
“We are waiting to receive the commission’s official report to better understand the basis of the allegations and findings,” the statement said.
In Washington, a U.S. official familiar with the matter said Dadras appears to be referring to detention facilities that NATO troops use to hold detainees for up to 96 hours after they are picked up on the battlefield by foreign troops.



