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Updated live from Wikipedia, last check: June 02, 2012 00:13 UTC (42 seconds ago)
From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia
During the Iraq War,
many insurgents, al-Qaeda and militant fighters were captured
and held at military bases in the region. On several occasions,
there were instances of prisoner escapes.
March, eleven Iraqi prisoners escaped from the
British-run
military prison at Shuaiba Base, after ten of them swapped their
outfits with visitors to the prison. No details were given on the
eleventh prisoner.[1]
2006
December 10, Ayman Sabawi an insurgent
financier serving fifteen years imprisonment for possession of
illegal weapons and manufacture of explosives, escaped from prison
with the help of a local police officer. He was the nephew of
deposed leader Saddam Hussein.[2]
May 9, five prisoners escaped the US-run Fort Suse military prison.
While their names were not released to the media, photographs of
the three Arab, one Kurdish and one unknown escapee were
distributed to local residents.[3]
2005
December 28, a failed escape attempt at Adala
Base by sixteen prisoners left four prisoners, four guards and
an interpreter dead, after the prisoners stormed the military
prison's armoury and one prisoner got a hold of an AK-47 rifle and began shooting.[4] The
incident prompted Bhushu Ibrahim Ali, Deputy Justice Minister for
Prisons, to state that negligence was at fault and Iraqi troops
were unprepared to run prisons.[5]
March 26, after noticing clay and dirt
clogging one of the camp toilets[6], guards
at Camp Bucca military
prison discovered two "extremely elaborate" tunnels built by
prisoners in preparation of a mass escape. It is believed the
prisoners were waiting for poor weather to aid their flight. One of
the tunnels was dug beneath a floorboard, and extended more than
600 feet, past the security fence surrounding the prison.[7] The
tunnels ran ten feet beneath the surface, and were 2-3 feet in
diameter.[8]