Risky integration: Germany brings back ISIS women and children
In light of fears of a risky return, Germany announced on
December 20 that it had received ISIS brides and their children, after years of
government rejection of this measure, in anticipation of the extremist
ideological background that they may return to as a result of the psychological
and behavioral distortion they suffered.
Returnees to Germany
Deutsche Welle quoted Foreign Minister Heiko Maas as saying
that his country has returned five ISIS brides and 18 children, including seven
orphans, from detention camps run by Kurdish forces in northeastern Syria,
indicating that the returnees represent humanitarian cases, especially orphans
and the sick. From his point of view, there was an urgent need to take them
back.
Maas expressed his happiness at the return of the children
and their mothers before Christmas, adding that this case demonstrates the
government's ability to restore more numbers during the next stage, pointing
out that the return process was carried out in cooperation with Finland, which
returned six children and two women to its lands. He thanked the government,
stressing that the mission was precarious and that there was much preparation.
Media reports issued by the Federal Prosecutor's Office
indicated that one of the three women returning to Germany, Leonor, aged 21,
was arrested upon her arrival at Frankfurt Airport on charges of belonging to a
terrorist group, while the reports did not mention any information about the
fate of the two returning women, Merv, a 24-year-old resident of Hamburg, and
Jasmine, who lives in Bonn, while the German network reported that the Syrian
camps still have 70 German adults as well as 150 children.
Security threat
The recent recruitment of German women and their children,
despite the limited number, is a shift in the file, as the country refused for
years to receive any of them until it was forced in May 2019 to reconsider with
a court decision that the children should be returned after a lawsuit filed by
grandparents to restore their grandchildren in the Syrian camps.
The German authorities indicate that about 1,060 citizens
had left the country to join the ranks of ISIS, and so far only a third of them
have returned. The authorities believe that 100 of them have directly
participated in hostilities and taken up arms, and therefore many of them were
classified as dangerous according to a scale designed by the Ministry of
Interior to determine the extent of the extremists' danger to domestic security
through criteria related to their participation in terrorist acts, joining
groups, training in weapons, or manufacturing explosives, and other risk
factors.
In Germany, Angela Merkel was refusing to bring them in
after the seriousness indicated by the security reports about their behavior,
and that many of them did not leave the extremist ideology.
Germany remains in front of the litigation and trial problem.
In light of the politicians’ demands to arrest all returnees and classify them
as dangerous agents, the German judiciary cannot prosecute many of them because
it needs clear evidence to judge them, and thus the chances of their
integration into society remain fraught with risks. In 2018, the intelligence
services warned of the return of children due to what they were exposed to of
acts of violence that will affect them in the future.



