New Zealand ISIS member likely stuck in Syria, prime minister says

A New Zealander dubbed “the bumbling jihadi” can
expect little help from his homeland after being captured in Syria by forces
fighting Islamic State, Prime Minister Jacinda Ardern warned Monday, March 4.
Mark Taylor, 42, told the Australian Broadcasting
Corporation he spent five years with Islamic State but fled in December and
surrendered to the SDF because conditions had become unbearable.
“There was no food, no money, basic services were
pretty much collapsed,” he said from an SDF prison.
“I was in a pickle myself and had to make a final
decision, which was to leave.”
Taylor, also known as Mohammad Daniel and Abu Abdul
Rahman, earned his derogatory nickname in 2015 after sending out a series of
pro-ISIS tweets but forgetting to turn off the geo-tagging function, giving
away his location.
He told the ABC the bungle earned him 50 days in an
ISIS prison.
He also burned his New Zealand passport in a
propaganda video and urged extremists in Australia and New Zealand to “commence
operations.”
Prime Minister Ardern ruled out stripping Taylor of
his New Zealand citizenship because he is not a dual citizen and so has no
alternative.
“We of course follow our obligations in
international law regarding ensuring we do not deem anyone stateless,” she
said.
But she also said New Zealand could offer Taylor no
consular assistance because it had no diplomats where he is being held and only
knew what had been gleaned from media reports.
“We have no connection with the forces detaining
him, so it’s difficult for us to provide information,” she said, adding that
Taylor would likely have to contact New Zealand officials in Turkey if he hoped
to eventually return home.
Justice Minister Andrew Little said if that
happened, Taylor could probably expect to face charges under anti-terror laws.
“It is very clear what happens when you transgress
the provisions of that legislation … there’s a range of penalties, including
imprisonment,” he said.
Ardern said New Zealand was not obliged to give
Taylor legal representation if he was charged overseas, nor did it have to pay
his way home.
Ardern refused to say how serious a threat Taylor
would represent if he went back home but said “contingency planning” had been
made to ensure New Zealanders were safe from returning jihadis.
She also declined to comment on details of Taylor’s
ABC interview, in which he insisted he was not an ISIS fighter and lamented the
fact he had been “too poor” to afford a Yazidi slave while with the extremist
group.
“I wouldn’t want to be drawn on those comments
because I do not want to be seen to jeopardize any potential case in the
future,” she said.