Sarposa Prison attack
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Sarposa Prison attack
Part of the War in Afghanistan (2001–present)
Date June 13, 2008
Location Kandahar, Afghanistan
Result Taliban victory
(1,200+ prisoners freed).
Belligerents
Flag of Afghanistan Afghan National Police Flag of Afghanistan Taliban insurgents
Casualties and losses
15 policemen killed1 8 prisoners, 2 suicide bombers

The Sarposa Prison attack was a raid on the Kandahar detention facility in Kandahar, Afghanistan by Taliban insurgents on June 13, 2008. One of the largest attacks by Afghan insurgents, the raid freed 400-1000 prisoners.2 As of 2008, prison administration was overseen by Abdul Qabir.2

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Followed unrest

In May 2008, 200 prisoners announced a hunger strike and 47 of the captives physically stitched their mouths shut to protest their conditions. The strike ended when the Afghan parliament agreed to review their detentions; as some of them had been held for two years without charge, or faced summary trials they felt were unfair.2

Raid

On June 13, a tanker truck approached the front gates of the prison at approximately 2100H after nightfall left the area darkened3, and detonated explosives contained within itself, killing all Afghan police in the area.2 A second suicide bomber was alleged to have walked to the back gates of the prison in the confusion, and detonated explosives he was carrying himself2 although later reports suggested the rear wall had not been breached.4 Insurgents fired rockets at the prison as the Taliban fighters broke in and a 30-minute battle began.

Over the next thirty minutes, a team of thirty insurgents aboard motorcycles fired rockets, AK-47s and rocket-propelled grenades into the prison. Several ran into the prison and began freeing prisoners3 who fled through the breached walls, and disappeared into nearby pomegranate and grape groves.2

Outcome

In the end almost all of the prisoners at the facility, more than 1,200 men, managed to escape. They were aided by minibuses waiting for them outside the prison during the attack. Some 390 of them were suspected Taliban fighters. Reports of people killed in the attack include: 9-16 police officers,56 8 prisoners and the 2 suicide bombers.17

Following reports of the mass-escape, Canadian troops stationed at Kandahar Airfield were deployed to secure the prison8 and ISAF troops began a door-to-door search through Kandahar seeking escapees.3

Resulting conflicts

Troops were redeployed9 into the area following the prison break and have been involved in skirmishes that have, as of June 17, resulted in 20 Taliban Deaths in Tabin, 16 in Khohak and Arghandab, with 2 Afghan and 4 British soldiers killed in separate incidents, 10 which lead up to the Battle of Arghandab.

References

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