The Guardian (Charlottetown)

Parents of accused ISIL member plead for help

- TOM BLACKWELL POSTMEDIA NETWORK

OTTAWA — The parents of Canadian citizen Jack Letts say the Turkish invasion of northeast Syria could well be a death sentence for the alleged ISIL sympathize­r, and are urging Ottawa to rescue their son before it’s too late.

Letts could fall victim to hard-core ISIL members, Syrian regime troops or even British special forces reported to be hunting down escaped terror suspects, John Letts and Sally Lane suggest in emails to the National Post and Global Affairs Canada.

One unconfirme­d report indicated the prison where he has been held came under Turkish artillery fire in recent days.

The couple are again pleading with Canada to intervene and bring Letts here, but the government has said there is little it can do in a region now engulfed by war.

“We’re terrified by what is happening,” John Letts said in an email response to questions. “The West (including Canada) are effectivel­y handing Jack and the other detainees back to ISIS, when the Canadians could simply ask the Americans or the British to take him into custody … Perhaps this is the UKCanadian way of dealing with the detainees — let those who are not fanatic be killed by ISIS so that the West doesn’t have to deal with them.”

The father has said previously he believes his son is innocent, but would be willing to see him prosecuted and jailed here if found to have committed crimes overseas.

Ankara moved into northeaste­rn Syria last week, aiming to strike a blow against Syrian Kurdish forces it says are linked with terrorists inside Turkey. The invasion, launched after President Donald Trump agreed to pull U.S. troops from the area, has touched off a dramatic cascade of events, the Kurds striking a desperate accord with Syria’s Assad regime, and Assad’s Russian allies also intervenin­g.

Dubbed “Jihadi Jack” by British news media, Letts is a Muslim convert who grew up in England and traveled to the Middle East in 2014, eventually winding up in ISIL-controlled Iraq and then in Raqqa, the Syrian city that became the group’s de-facto capital.

He was captured by Syrian Kurdish forces after escaping Raqqa and has been held by them since. Though he once talked online about committing violent acts against British troops, Letts said he never did anything of the sort and grew strongly disenchant­ed with the extremist organizati­on.

Even so, the U.K. revoked his British citizenshi­p in August. Like his father, who was born and raised in Canada, his mother, who spent much of her childhood here, and his brother, Letts was a joint U.K.-Canadian citizen.

Now the 23-year-old holds only Canadian nationalit­y.

 ?? POSTMEDIA ?? John Letts and Sally Lane, parents to Jack, arrive at the Old Bailey charged with making money available for suspected terrorist activities on September 10, 2018, in London, England.
POSTMEDIA John Letts and Sally Lane, parents to Jack, arrive at the Old Bailey charged with making money available for suspected terrorist activities on September 10, 2018, in London, England.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Canada