Iran Daily

EU states mixed on Trump demand to take back Daesh terrorists

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US President Donald Trump’s demand that European countries take back their citizens fighting in Syria received a mixed reaction Monday, as nations voiced concerns about how to bring homegrown Daesh terrorists to trial.

“The United States is asking Britain, France, Germany and other European allies to take back over 800 ISIS fighters that we captured in Syria and put them on trial. The alternativ­e is not a good one in that we will be forced to release them,” Trump tweeted on Saturday, using an acronym for Daesh.

The question of such foreign militants has been a conundrum for the Europeans for several years, AP wrote.

But few European countries have embassies in Syria or Iraq, let alone extraditio­n treaties to get their citizens back. Proving who is who and gathering solid evidence against suspects that would stand up in European courts is virtually impossible.

“It is certainly not as easy as they think in America,” German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas told reporters Monday at a meeting of EU foreign ministers. “German citizens have the right to return, but we have little ability in Syria at present to check whether German citizens are actually affected.”

Maas said authoritie­s would have to “check to what extent they were involved in fighting for IS, which would result in criminal proceeding­s having to be opened against them.”

“These people can come to Germany only if it is ensured that they can immediatel­y be taken into custody,” he said.

Security experts have warned that convicted terrorists will walk free from European prisons by the dozens over the next two years, many of them terrorists who trained or fought in Syria and Iraq but never faced serious charges due to insufficie­nt evidence.

French extremists made up the largest contingent of European recruits. French officials are concerned because in 2015 and 2016, a Daesh cell of French and Belgian members crossed from Syria into Turkey, eventually launching deadly attacks on Paris and Brussels.

“The last territoria­l bastions of Daesh are falling, which doesn’t mean that the action of Daesh is finished. On the contrary,” said French Foreign Minister Jean-yves Le Drian.

Britain refuses to take back citizens who joined Daesh and has stripped them of their citizenshi­p. Belgium has said previously that it would not make any great effort to secure the release of 12 citizens imprisoned in Syria and two in Iraq.

Other European countries have remained largely silent about the fate of men and women whom many see as a security threat.

Hungarian Foreign Minister Peter Szijjarto said the issue is “one of the greatest challenges ahead of us for the upcoming months.”

“Our major endeavor now should be not to allow them to come back to Europe,” said Szijjarto, whose staunchly antimigran­t government has linked extremist attacks to migration.

But Slovakian Foreign Minister Miroslav Lajcak, also part of an anti-migrant government, said, “I would certainly be in favor” of Europe taking foreign militants back.

“There is clearly a need to define ... the European position on this issue,” Lajcak told reporters.

“Whether we like or dislike the US position, they make no secret of it. It’s very clear,” he said. “This is the key partnershi­p for the European Union. But the rules of this partnershi­p have changed and we need to be able to react to it.”

US Democratic Senator Bob Menendez, on a visit to Brussels, said the Europeans have to find a way to deal with the challenge.

“If we have someone who we have well establishe­d under law as someone who is an ISIS fighter then we should be able to prosecute them whether at home or abroad” he said at the German Marshall Fund think tank.

 ??  ?? FRANCISCO SECO/AP Germany’s Foreign Minister Heiko Maas speaks with the media as he arrives to an EU Foreign Ministers meeting at the European Council headquarte­rs in Brussels, on Feb. 18, 2019.
FRANCISCO SECO/AP Germany’s Foreign Minister Heiko Maas speaks with the media as he arrives to an EU Foreign Ministers meeting at the European Council headquarte­rs in Brussels, on Feb. 18, 2019.

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