Arab Times

Finland tries twins over IS massacre

Dutch detain man suspected of involvemen­t in terror group

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HELSINKI, Dec 14, (Agencies): Iraqi twin brothers went on trial Tuesday in Finland over their alleged role in a 2014 massacre of up to 1,700 unarmed recruits by the Islamic State group in Iraq.

The 24-year-old brothers, who came to Finland as asylum seekers in September 2015 and were arrested a few months later, have pleaded not guilty to the charges.

The trial began on Tuesday with procedural matters, and the defendants were not in the courtroom.

The prosecutio­n is seeking life in prison for the brothers’ alleged role in the massacre of unarmed, mostly Shiite military recruits captured outside the Speicher military base in Tikrit.

The highest estimates put the total number of executed cadets at 1,700.

One of the two brothers is believed to appear in a propaganda video later released by the Islamic State group (IS), shooting dead at least 11 prisoners who had been forced to lay down in a hole on the ground for execution.

The twins look so much alike that the prosecutor has been unable to identify which of the two may appear in the video, opting instead to charge them both for an unspecifie­d number of murders.

Deputy state prosecutor Raija Toiviainen said the murder charges covered the twin’s active role in the massacre as a whole, for capturing and transporti­ng the victims, all the while knowing it would result in their execution.

“In the same way that if a murder takes place on the street in which several people participat­e, one by firing the gun and another one by holding the victim still for example ... they can all be sentenced for murder,” she explained to AFP.

Assault

The twins have also been charged with committing a war crime for allegedly killing unarmed cadets, as well as for “aggravated assault with terrorist aims”.

One of the prosecutio­n witnesses has claimed that the brothers, together with other IS fighters, captured and beat him up in his apartment and then took him by force to a former palace of late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein where the assault continued.

A life sentence in Finland usually consists of 14 years in prison before the prisoner is paroled.

Meanwhile, Dutch prosecutor­s say a 40-year-old man suspected of involvemen­t in a terror organizati­on in Syria or Iraq was arrested recently at Amsterdam’s Schiphol Airport after earlier being detained in Turkey.

The National Prosecutor’s Office says in a statement that the suspect was taken into custody on Saturday and appeared before an investigat­ing judge on Tuesday.

The man, whose identity was not released, is thought to have been in territory controlled by the extremist Islamic State group in Syria or Iraq since October 2015. He was detained last month when he crossed from Islamic State-controlled territory into Turkey.

The Dutch counterter­rorism coordinato­r warned last month of the threat posed to the Netherland­s by battlehard­ened jihadi fighters returning home from Syria and Iraq.

In another developmen­t, the French lower house of parliament voted early on Wednesday to extend the country’s state of emergency until July 15, 2017, as France remains on high alert against the threat of terror attacks.

The extension of the state of emergency had already been proposed on Dec 10 by France’s new prime minister, Bernard Cazeneuve. Political parties are keen to show they are getting a grip on the threat of attacks as France prepares for presidenti­al elections in 2017.

France’s upper house Senate will also review the measures on Thursday.

The socialist government imposed the state of emergency — which gives police extended powers to search and arrest — in November last year after attacks by Islamist militants in Paris that killed 130 people.

The state of emergency, which was originally due to end in mid-January, has already been extended four times because the government considers that the risk of armed attacks by Islamist militants remains high.

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