European countries push back on Trump demand to repatriate captured Isis fighters and families
European countries have pushed back on a US demand
to repatriate citizens who went to Syria to join Isis, deepening a split
between Washington and its allies on the issue.
More than 800 European citizens are currently being
detained in Syria on suspicion of fighting for Isis — many of them were
captured in the last two months during the battle for the last of the terror
group’s territory.
President Donald Trump called this weekend for
European governments to “step up and do the job that they are so capable of
doing” by taking the suspects back.
“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 Caliphate is ready to fall. The
alternative is not a good one in that we will be forced to release them,” he
wrote on Twitter.
But the UK, France and Germany have been reluctant
to bring home Isis suspects, fearing that they would pose a security threat
upon their return.
"It is certainly not as easy as they think in
America," German Foreign Minister Heiko Maas said in response to Trump.
"These people can come to Germany only if it is ensured that they can
immediately be taken into custody."
Germany’s interior ministry said Monday that Germany
citizens have the right to return “in principle”, but suggested that would only
happen with consular access, which isn’t in place in Syria at the moment.
France and the UK also appear to be in no rush to
bring them home. But the planned withdrawal of some 2,000 US troops from Syria
has made the issue more urgent.
The Syrian Democratic Forces, a US-backed militia
that is holding the suspects, has said it does not have the capability to
continue holding them all indefinitely. When US forces go, its resources will
be stretched even further.
Abdulkarim Omar, co-chair of foreign relations in
the Kurdish-led region, told Reuters on Monday that the detainees were a
“time-bomb”, and that they could escape in the event of an attack that may
follow the US withdrawal.
That prospect was addressed by France’s justice
minister on Monday.
"There is a new geo-political context, with the
US withdrawal. For the time being we are not changing our policy," the
minister, Nicole Belloubet, told France 2 television. "At this stage
France is not responding to (Trump's) demands."
Both France and Germany have suggested that Isis
suspects be tried in Syria or Iraq, but the mechanisms for doing so do not
currently exist.
The fate of British Isis suspects held in Syria has
been thrown into the spotlight in recent days following the discovery that
Shamima Begum, a 19-year-old British woman who left the UK to join Isis four
years ago, was among those detained in the country.
The home secretary, Sajid Javid, has previously said
that he would move to block any British citizen suspected of joining Isis from
returning.
Mr Javid said of her case: "My message is
clear: if you have supported terrorist organisations abroad I will not hesitate
to prevent your return.”
“If you do manage to return you should be ready to
be questioned, investigated and potentially prosecuted," he told The
Times.
But the UK justice secretary, David Gauke, has said
that the UK may be powerless to stop her returning.
"Obviously we have to act within the powers
that we have," he told Sky News. “It is the case we can’t make people
stateless, but without getting too drawn into the specifics, the approach that
we take as a government, which is the responsible one, is to ensure that we
protect the British public. That is the key thing."
There are an estimated 800 foreign fighters being
held in prisons by the Syrian Democratic Forces, along with around 700 wives
and 1,500 children in camps.
Among them are around 20 British women and children,
and 7 British men. A total of 150 French citizens are thought to be held, including
50 adults, according to military officials cited by Reuters.