EU countries reject Trump's call to repatriate Syria jihadists

US President Donald Trump has
threatened to release “thousands” of Daesh fighters held in Syria “to Europe”
if their countries do not take back their citizens who went to join the terror
group.
Trump appeared to conflate the
European fighters with Isis members from other countries in his comments on
Thursday, claiming there were “2,500 Daesh fighters that we want Europe to
take, because they were going back into Europe, into France, into Germany, into
various places.”
Germany's foreign minister Heiko Maas
addressed some of the complications involved in returning Daesh fighters to the
country.
Maas noted that trials would be
"extremely difficult to realize" largely due to the absence of
"judicial information." As a result, he added, prisoners should only
be brought back to Germany if it was certain that they would face trial.
Trump has threatened to release
European Isis fighters held in Syria. Back in February, when the Isis caliphate
was close to collapse, he called on “Britain, France, Germany and other
European allies to take back over 800 Isis fighters that we captured in Syria
and put them on trial.”
France further said it would take
back militants on a “case by case” basis but would not comply with US president
Donald Trump’s call at the weekend for European fighters to be repatriated
immediately.
Nicole Belloubet, French justice
minister, told France 2 television: “At this stage France is not responding to
Trump’s demands.”
London has taken a hard line on the
case of Begum. Sajid Javid, UK home secretary, has said he will “not hesitate”
to prevent the return of British nationals who have supported terrorist
organizations abroad.
“If you do manage to return you
should be ready to be questioned, investigated and potentially prosecuted,”
Javid said.
Stig Jarle Hansen, associate
professor and leader of the international relations program at the Norwegian
University of Life Science and one of the world's leading experts on Islamism,
expresses doubts that any European state will act on Donald Trump’s request.
According to Hansen, all parties are
trying to solve the dilemma of those in Syria, but it is very complicated,
especially since many of those who traveled to Syria and Iraq took with them
children, minors and members of their families, who did not participate in any
activity within the organization.
He further added that Trump seeks to
reassure his voters that he has managed to do many things during his first
term, and that he deserves their votes in the presidential election next year.
He has made the United States a great country again, and his words grew much
value and responsiveness by others.