In an attack orchestrated by a Pakistani Taliban commander, around 250 prisoners, most of them militants, were freed this week at the central prison in Dera Ismail Khan in northwestern Pakistan.
The commander, Ahmed Rashid, had been freed a year earlier, this time at the central jail in Bannu, where 150 Taliban fighters stormed the facility and released nearly 400 prisoners -- Pakistan's largest jailbreak.
Both prison breaks
happened in the stronghold of the Pakistani Taliban, Khyber Pakhtunkhwa
province, which borders North and South Waziristan, and both were
conducted with a high degree of sophistication.
A police officer is hospitalized after being hurt in this week's deadly Taliban attack on a Pakistani prison.
This week's attack
unfolded in multiple stages, beginning with cutting the prison's
electricity, detonating bombs that had been planted around the facility
to breach its external wall, and ambushing the security forces that
rushed to the scene.
Once the militants
overwhelmed the guards, they used loudspeakers to contact and locate
specific prisoners, freeing them from their cells with hand grenades. At
least 13 people died in the attack. Pakistani authorities launched a
search operation for the missing prisoners, but few have been
recaptured. The others have simply melted away into the mountains.
Jihadist militants have
been breaking people out of prison across the Middle East and South Asia
for years, some with significant consequences for the United States and
its allies.
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A 2006 prison break in
the Yemeni capital, Sanaa, led to the creation of al Qaeda in the
Arabian Peninsula, one of al Qaeda's most virulent affiliates, the one
that recruited the "underwear bomber" who nearly brought down Northwest
Airlines Flight 253 over Detroit on Christmas Day 2009.
During the 2006 prison
break, 23 inmates escaped through a 460-foot tunnel into a nearby
mosque. Two of the escapees went on to become the leader and deputy
leader of al Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula.
In 2008 and again in
2011, the Afghan Taliban led attacks on the Sarposa prison in Kandahar
in southern Afghanistan that freed an astounding number of militants,
around 1,700.
Like the prison attacks
by the Taliban in Pakistan, the Kandahar plots showed sophisticated
planning. In the aftermath of the 2011 breach, Afghan officials
discovered an intricate network of tunnels under the jail, equipped with
electrical and ventilation systems.
But perhaps no group has
made prison breaks an organizational focus more than al Qaeda in Iraq.
On July 21, 2012, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, al Qaeda in Iraq's leader,
announced the "Breaking the Walls" campaign, a yearlong effort to
release his group's prisoners.
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According to a count by
the Institute for the Study of War, since al-Baghdadi's announcement, al
Qaeda in Iraq has conducted assaults on seven major prisons.
Earlier this month,
hundreds of prisoners, including senior members of al Qaeda, escaped
from Iraq's Abu Ghraib jail on the outskirts of Baghdad following a
military-style assault on the prison. Al Qaeda's Iraqi affiliate claimed responsibility for that attack.
Elsewhere in the Middle East, a prison riot and an attack launched from outside Al-Kuifiya prison in Benghazi, Libya, freed more than 1,000 inmates Saturday.
Although it doesn't
appear that groups such as the Taliban and al Qaeda are coordinating
strategies in freeing their fellow militants, it is likely that they are
inspiring each other with every successful, and well-publicized, prison
break.
The attacks are
generally well-organized and often free significant numbers of inmates,
refreshing the militant groups' ranks, and each successful prison break
is a propaganda coup.
Insiders assist in
varying degrees in these different prison breaks, but the militants are
also exploiting the countries' inadequate correctional systems. Many of
these prison facilities where convicts have escaped en masse were meant
to house criminals, not terrorists, and they often lack the
fortification needed to fend off armed assaults.
1,200 inmates break out of Benghazi prison
Security concerns
regarding prison facilities are part of the reason that 86 Guantanamo
Bay detainees who were cleared for transfer into the custody of their
home countries three years ago still remain in jail at Guantanamo.
Fifty-six of those men
are from Yemen, which has a notoriously porous prison system. The recent
prison breaks in Pakistan, Iraq and Libya are reminders that the United
States needs to do more to strengthen high security prisons in
countries such as Yemen if there is any hope that prisoners who are
cleared for transfer -- but have been languishing at Guantanamo for many
years -- are ever to return home.
via cnn
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