Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Teens deported to U.K. from Turkey

3 are caught seeking passage to Syria

- GREGORY KATZ AND SUZAN FRASER

LONDON — Three male teens from Britain who reached Turkey before being deported to the U.K. and arrested are believed to be the latest examples of a worrying trend — the rising number of young Britons seeking to travel to Syria to join extremists there.

The three suspects were being questioned at a central London police station after their alleged bid to get to Syria, coming soon after three British schoolgirl­s managed to elude authoritie­s and get to Syria last month. The girls are believed by police to have joined Islamic State militants in their self-declared caliphate, or state under Islamic law, in parts of Syria and Iraq.

British police said the three males — two 17-yearold boys and a 19-year-old man — were arrested on suspicion of planning terrorist acts. They haven’t been charged, and their names haven’t been released.

When the schoolgirl­s managed to slip into Syria despite a search by both Turkish and British authoritie­s, there was finger-pointing on both sides. Things were quite different Sunday, as Turkey and Britain praised the fruits of their cooperatio­n.

The male trio left Britain several days ago, traveling to Spain and then flying from Barcelona to Turkey. They were detained in Istanbul on Friday after British officials notified Turkish authoritie­s.

British legislator Keith Vaz, chairman of the Home Affairs Select Committee, said the case shows that the number of young Britons trying to reach the conflict zone in Syria “is on a much larger scale” than had been thought.

Vaz praised Turkish authoritie­s for acting quickly to prevent the teens from entering Syria.

Police counterter­rorism officials and security services personnel said their resources have been badly stretched as they try to maintain surveillan­ce on the growing number of individual­s interested in joining the extremists. They warned that some who return after spending time in the conflict zone plan to launch attacks inside Britain.

A senior Turkish government official, who can’t be named because of Turkish rules that bar civil servants from speaking to journalist­s without prior authorizat­ion, said the two 17-year-old boys had been detained at Istanbul’s Sabiha Gokcen airport Friday by Turkish authoritie­s who were acting on intelligen­ce provided by British officials.

The teenagers were planning to travel to Syria, the official said. Turkish authoritie­s believe they wanted to join Islamic State extremists, but the official cautioned that they weren’t “100 percent” certain that was their aim.

The 19-year-old man was detained at the airport after questionin­g by police based on profiling at the airport, the official said. British police originally believed only two teens were traveling, but soon learned that a third was involved.

They were deported to London on Saturday — instead of Spain as is the normal procedure in Turkey — because Britain insisted that they be returned to Britain, the Turkish official said.

The Turkish official described the situation as a “‘joint Turkish-British operation,” and said Turkey welcomed the timely intelligen­ce provided by Britain.

“Turkey is doing all that it can to stop the passage into Syria, but there has to be cooperatio­n,” the official said. “This operation shows what can be achieved when there is cooperatio­n.”

Turkey’s strategic position as a convenient link between Western Europe and Syria has meant that an increasing number of Britons have traveled there to use it as a jumping-off point to enter Syria and link up with the Islamic State.

British police say roughly 700 Britons have traveled to Syria to join extremists. Recent cases indicate a growing number of young women are traveling there to become “jihadi brides.”

Authoritie­s say Internet-based social media made it much easier for young Britons to communicat­e with extremists inside Syria and that many are also drawn by websites touting the attraction of living under Islamic law.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States