HRW Condemns France 'Outsourcing' of ISIS Trials to Iraq

Human Rights Watch on Friday condemned France's
"outsourcing" of trials of ISIS group suspects to "abusive
justice systems", after seven of its nationals have this week been
sentenced to death in Iraq.
Two of them have "alleged that they were tortured or coerced
to confess", the New York-based watchdog said in a statement.
"France and other countries should not be outsourcing
management of their terrorism suspects to abusive justice systems," said
HRW's acting Middle East director, Lama Fakih.
"These countries should not be sitting idly by while
their citizens are transferred to a country where their right to a fair trial
and protection from torture are undermined."
A Baghdad court sentenced a Frenchman to death on Wednesday
for joining ISIS, bringing to seven the number of French militants on death row
in Iraq.
Yassine Sakkam's sentence came despite France reiterating
its opposition to capital punishment this week.
In January, a group of 11 French citizens and one Tunisian
was handed over to Iraqi authorities by a US-backed force which expelled the
militant group from its last bastion in Syria.
Around 1,000 suspected foreign ISIS fighters are held in
detention by this Kurdish force and Iraq has offered to put them on trial in
exchange for millions of dollars, potentially solving a legal conundrum for
Western governments but sparking rights concerns.
France has long insisted its adult citizens captured in Iraq
or Syria must face trial before local courts, while stressing its opposition to
capital punishment.
Iraqi law provides for the death penalty for anyone joining
a "terrorist group" -- even those who did not take up arms.
HRW said it had documented cases of Iraqi interrogators
"using a range of torture techniques, including beating suspects on the soles
of their feet, internationally known as 'falaka', and waterboarding, which
would not leave lasting marks on the person´s body".
t also condemned "the routine failure of the Iraqi
justice system to credibly investigate torture allegations".
Before that, in all but one case observed by HRW since 2016,
trials had consisted of "a judge briefly interviewing the defendant,
usually relying solely on a confession, often coerced, with no effective legal
representation".
A group representing the families of French militants has
asked the government in Paris to "do everything possible to stop this
fatal chain of death sentences" and to try them "on our soil".
On Tuesday, Foreign Minister Jean-Yves Le Drian said France
was stepping up efforts to stop Iraq executing those convicted.