Houston Chronicle Sunday

German girl is found in Iraq

Runaway, 16, was working with ISIS police after conversion

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BERLIN — A German girl who ran away from home after converting to Islam has been found as Iraqi forces liberated the northern city of Mosul from Islamic State extremists, German and Iraqi officials said Saturday.

She is reported to be in good health and will be interrogat­ed next week by Iraqi officials.

The 16-year-old teenager, identified only as Linda W. in line with German privacy laws, is getting consular assistance from the German Embassy in Iraq, prosecutor Lorenz Haase said from the eastern German city of Dresden.

Three Iraqi intelligen­ce and investigat­ive sources confirmed that the German teenager, who was apprehende­d in the basement of a home in Mosul’s Old City earlier this month, was Linda W.

‘Too stunned’

The girl is in good health, the Iraqi officials said, adding that on the day of her arrest she was “too stunned” to speak but now she is doing better. They said she had been working with the ISIS police department.

Linda W. theoretica­lly could face the death sentence, according to Iraq’s counter-terrorism law. However, even if she is sentenced to death in Iraq, she would not be executed before the age of 22.

Photos of a disheveled young woman in the presence of Iraqi soldiers went viral online last week, but there were contradict­ing reports about the girl’s identity.

The German teenager had married a Muslim Arab she met online after arriving in the group’s territory, the Iraqi officials added, speaking on condition of anonymity because the informatio­n was not public. They said Linda W. was one of 26 foreigners arrested in Mosul since the retreat of the extremists there.

So far, the young German has not made any statement. The officials said she is being held along with other foreign women at a prison near Baghdad’s airport. Starting next week, she’ll be investigat­ed by the Iraqis, who will bring in German interprete­rs for the interrogat­ion since she does not speak much Arabic.

No arrest warrant

Haase, the German prosecutor, said the girl ran away from her family home in Pulsnitz in eastern Germany last summer. It’s not clear yet whether she will return to Germany, he said.

“We, as the public prosecutor’s office Dresden, have not applied for an arrest warrant and will therefore not be able to request extraditio­n,” Haase said. “There is the possibilit­y that Linda might be put on trial in Iraq. She might be expelled for being a foreigner or, because she is a minor reported missing in Germany, she could be handed over to Germany.”

The 26 foreigners found in Mosul included two men, eight children and 16 women, the Iraqi officials said.

Some of those arrested were from Chechnya, and the women were from Russia, Iran, Syria, France, Belgium and Germany.

In addition to Linda W., the Iraqis found three other women from Germany, with roots in Morocco, Algeria and Chechnya.

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