Afghan prison commander jailed for 12 years for war crimes by Dutch court

INSUBCONTINENT EXCLUSIVE:
An Afghan man was convicted by a Dutch court on Thursday of war crimes and torture for abusing political opponents at Kabul&s Pul-e-Charkhi
prison in the 1980s and was sentenced to 12 years in jail.Judges said the man, 76, who had been calling himself Abdul Rafief, was actually
Abdul Razaq Arif who served as commander of the prison between 1983 and 1990
They dismissed his testimony that he was the victim of a mistaken identity, Reuters reported.A lawyer for Arif said he would appeal.Arif
arrived in the Netherlands seeking asylum under the Rafief name in 2001 and since became a Dutch national.He was being tried under
&universal jurisdiction& principles, which say suspected war crimes and crimes against humanity can be prosecuted abroad if they cannot be
tried in the country where they were allegedly committed, Reuters reported.According to prosecutors, Arif was responsible for political
prisoners in the jail, who were held in inhumane conditions in the facility
Guards under his command beat, tortured and executed prisoners, they said.During the trial prosecutors cited witnesses who identified
&Rafief& as Arif to investigative judges
One victim told judges he still suffered sleepless nights from the psychological torture he underwent in prison.In the 1980s, Afghanistan&s
Soviet-backed government was fighting a guerrilla war against &Mujahideen& Islamist rebels at the time, following the Soviet invasion in
1979.The Netherlands has previously tried three high ranking officials of the Afghan military intelligence service for similar crimes in the
same period in Afghanistan.The post Afghan prison commander jailed for 12 years for war crimes by Dutch court first appeared on Ariana News.