Juma Khan
- The United States held an individual named Juma Khan in extrajudicial detention in its Guantanamo Bay detainment camps.
Haji Juma Khan, an ethnic Baluch from Afghanistan’s Nimroz Province, is a drug lord with links to the Taliban. The title Haji (alternative spelling Hajji) indicates that he has completed the Hajj pilgrimage to Mecca.[1]
Juma Khan, an illiterate provincial drug smuggler in southwestern Afghanistan in the 1990s, when the Taliban governed the country, seized control of the town of Baramcha in the Chagai Hills on the Pakistani border in late 2001 and turned it into a hub of smuggling and gun running. He rose to national prominence after the American-led invasion, taking advantage of a record surge in opium and heroin production in Afghanistan after the fall of the Taliban. He was briefly detained by American forces after the 2001 fall of the Taliban, and released, even though American officials knew at the time that he was involved in narcotics trafficking.[2] After being released Juma Khan has allegedly gone on to run the Taliban's opium distribution network, selling the drug worldwide and using the profits to equip Taliban forces militarily.[3]
In 2008 he was arrested in Indonesia and transported to New York to face charges under a new American narco-terrorism law. It later turned out, that Juma Khan was also a longtime American informer, who provided information about the Taliban, Afghan corruption and other drug traffickers, and was paid a large amount of cash by the United States. Plea negotiations are quietly under way. A plea bargain might keep many of the details of his relationship to the United States out of the public record.[3]
See also
References
- ↑ Walsh, Declan (August 16, 2008). "Flower power". Guardian.co.uk.
- ↑ Risen, James (December 11, 2010). "Propping Up a Drug Lord, Then Arresting Him". Nytimes.com.
- 1 2 McGirk, Tim (August 2, 2004). "Terrorism's Harvest". Time.com.
External links
- United States of America vs. Haji Juma Khan, INDICTMENT
- "Fierce factional fighting reported in northwestern Afghanistan" Deutsche Presse-Agentur March 26, 2003. Lexis-Nexis September 10, 2003
- "Afghan government probes killings in northwest" Agence France Presse May 1, 2003. Lexis Nexis September 10, 2003
- "Ex-Taliban governor held in Afghanistan" April 6, 2003. The News September 10, 2003