SDF tries ISIS militants in Syria for first time with unified law
The Autonomous Administration of the
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) has drawn up and ratified a unified law in order
to try Syrians, specifically those belonging to ISIS, accused of terrorism
cases. The SDF’s Administrative Council confirmed that the aim of ratifying the
new law is to unify it in all administrations and regions affiliated with the
Autonomous Administration, specifying the penalties for perpetrators of terrorism
cases, in contrast to previous laws that raised many questions from the civil
and international community and international legal advisors for omitting many
previously established aspects.
Internal trial
The Administrative Council decided
to ratify the unification of the “Trying Syrians Accused of Terrorism Issues”
law, which consists of 20 articles. Khaled Ali, a member of the Social Justice
Council in northeastern Syria, said that the ratification of the
counterterrorism law came to unify the trial of Syrians accused of terrorism
issues in the prisons of the Autonomous Administration and that its goal is to
unify the law in all the administrations and regions of the Autonomous
Administration.
About 15,000 detainees on terrorism
charges are in SDF prisons, including more than 60 foreign nationals besides
Syrians, most of whom are former members of ISIS.
Regarding the previous laws dealing
with terrorist cases, Ali noted that there were previous laws dealing with the
laws of terrorism cases in the regions of Al-Jazirah and the Euphrates, but
what happened was the unification of the law before a single court of appeal
that looks into all terrorism cases. He stressed that the previous laws raised
many questions from the civil and international community and international
legal advisors for its omission of many previously applicable aspects, adding
that the new law tries to understand all aspects, make up for the shortcomings,
and give exemptions and excuses to those who surrender.
Terrorism law
The ratified law defines
“terrorism”, “terrorist” and “terrorist organization”, in addition to specified
penalties for perpetrators of terrorism cases. Ali stressed that the trial of
some members of the terrorist organization does not mean that the SDF is not
requested to establish an international court in the region and that 900 ISIS
members of Syrian nationality are being tried since the beginning of 2020.
The SDF was criticized for its
arbitrary arrest of people on charges of belonging to the terrorist organization,
and soon a number of them were released through tribal mediation, as the Syrian
members of the organization are being tried in People's Defense Courts, one in
Qamishli and another in Kobani.
The People’s Defense Court is one of
the institutions of social justice in the regions of the Autonomous
Administration established at the beginning of 2014 under the pretext of
looking into the terrorist crimes committed against the people of northeastern
Syria.
There are thousands of ISIS members
in the prisons of the SDF since it took control of the city of Raqqa and areas
of the Deir Ezzor countryside, where the organization was spreading before
2017, while the Autonomous Administration in northern and eastern Syria
allocated camps for families of prisoners of different nationalities.
The Netherlands was one of the first
European countries that supported the Autonomous Administration to establish an
international court to try ISIS members, which came in a letter sent by Dutch
Foreign Minister Stef Blok to the Autonomous Administration for the trial of
ISIS elements in northern and eastern Syria.
Amal Dada, the co-chair of the
Department of Foreign Relations in the Autonomous Administration, confirmed
that the administration exchanged views with many European delegations on the
issue of prosecuting ISIS members in northeastern Syria, adding that there is a
letter from the Dutch Foreign Minister pledging his country’s support for the
establishment an International Tribunal for the Trial of ISIS Detainees.
Dada clarified that there is a
diplomatic recovery and an international turnout for the Autonomous
Administration's areas in northern and eastern Syria to see the status of this
administration, its mechanism of action, its structure, and the institutional
workflow in it. She indicated that there are promises to support the
administration in terms of service, relief and reconstruction, especially from
the Swedish delegation that visited the administration recently, noting that
the components of northern and eastern Syria have the right to participate in
the political process.
“We are open to dialogue, and there
is an exchange of visits with many countries. We have delegations abroad
regarding our participation in the political process and the safe zone,” Dada
said.