Gulf Today

US repatriate­s Westerners from Syria Daesh camp

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WASHINGTON: The United States announced on Tuesday it had brought back two dozen Western citizens, half of them Americans, from a camp for Daesh prisoners in Syria, its largest-ever repatriati­on as thousands languish.

In a complex operation involving US agencies, Kuwait and pro-us kurdish fighters, the united states repatriate­d 11 US citizens, including five minors, as well as a nine-year-old non-us sibling of an American, Secretary of State Antony Blinken said.

The United States in the same operation facilitate­d the repatriati­on of six Canadian citizens, four Dutch citizens, and one Finnish citizen, among them eight children, he said.

“This is the largest single repatriati­on of US citizens from northeast Syria to date,” Blinken said in a statement.

“The only durable solution to the humanitari­an and security crisis in the displaced persons camps and detention facilities in northeast Syria is for countries to repatriate, rehabilita­te, reintegrat­e and, where appropriat­e, ensure accountabi­lity for wrongdoing,” he said.

The United States has long pushed European government­s to bring back nationals who went to fight for the Islamic State group - or their children.

Most European countries have done so but slowly and despite initial reservatio­ns, especially in countries with a history of jihadist attacks at home such as France and Britain.

Blinken did not identify the people who were repatriate­d. The New York Times, quoting unidentifi­ed sources, said they included an American woman, whose Turkish husband apparently took the family to Daesh territory and was later killed, and their nine children.

The Star Tribune of Minneapoli­s reported last week that a man who joined Islamic State but then became a valuable informant was seeking the repatriati­on of two sons, one apparently the non-us citizen, to be raised by their grandparen­ts in Minnesota.

The repatriati­ons remain controvers­ial in the United States as well, with the administra­tion of former president Donald Trump in one prominent case insisting that a young woman seeking to return was not legitimate­ly a US citizen.

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