Daily Tribune (Philippines)

France repatriate­s families from Syrian jihadist camps

Pressure from humanitari­an organizati­ons prompts Paris to act

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PARIS, France (AFP) — France repatriate­d 15 women and 32 children held in jihadist prison camps in northeaste­rn Syria, the French foreign ministry said Tuesday.

“The minors were handed over to the services in charge of child assistance and will be subject to medical and social monitoring,” the ministry said in a statement.

It added that “the adults have been handed over to the competent judicial authoritie­s.”

Over the past decade, thousands of extremists in Europe traveled to Syria to become fighters with the Islamic State group, often taking their families to live in the self-declared “caliphate” it set up in territory seized in Iraq and Syria.

Since the “caliphate” fell in 2019, the return of family members of fighters who were captured or killed has been a thorny issue for European countries.

The return announced Tuesday — which was committed due to pressure from humanitari­an organizati­ons — is France’s third large-scale repatriati­on.

The previous one was in October last year, when Paris repatriate­d 15 women and 40 children, and in July, when 16 mothers and 35 minors were returned.

The women and children repatriate­d Tuesday were in the Roj camp in northeast Syria under Kurdish administra­tion, located about 15 kilometers from the Iraqi and Turkish borders.

The French authoritie­s thanked “the local administra­tion in northeaste­rn Syria for its cooperatio­n, which made this operation possible.”

Tuesday’s operation comes shortly after the United Nations Committee against Torture condemned France for failing to repatriate French nationals from prison camps in northeaste­rn Syria.

 ?? ERNESTO BENAVIDES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ?? ACTIVIST confronts riot police during a protest demanding the resignatio­n of Peru’s President Dina Boluarte in Lima,. Civil unrest since the ouster of Boluarte’s predecesso­r, Pedro Castillo, in early December has left 46 people dead and prompted the government to impose a state of emergency in violence-hit areas.
ERNESTO BENAVIDES/AGENCE FRANCE-PRESSE ACTIVIST confronts riot police during a protest demanding the resignatio­n of Peru’s President Dina Boluarte in Lima,. Civil unrest since the ouster of Boluarte’s predecesso­r, Pedro Castillo, in early December has left 46 people dead and prompted the government to impose a state of emergency in violence-hit areas.

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