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Syrian Kurds: 17 Indonesians who escaped Daesh leave Syria

Syrian Kurds: 17 Indonesians who escaped Daesh leave Syria
The flag used by Daesh features a banner reading: 'There is no God but Allah, Mohammad is the messenger of Allah'. (File photo via REUTERS)
Updated 10 August 2017

Syrian Kurds: 17 Indonesians who escaped Daesh leave Syria

Syrian Kurds: 17 Indonesians who escaped Daesh leave Syria

BEIRUT: A group of 17 Indonesians who had joined the Daesh group in the northern Syrian city of Raqqa have been handed over to representatives of their country and have left Syria, a local Kurdish official and a spokeswoman said on Wednesday.
According to the official, Omar Alloush, the Indonesian nationals included men, women and children. They were handed over on Tuesday at a Syria-Iraq border crossing. They had been asking to be sent back home, he said.
Spokeswoman Nisreen Abdullah from the Women’s Protection Units also confirmed the handover. The identities of the Indonesians were not immediately available and Iraqi officials could not confirm the report.
Lalu Muhammad Iqbal, the director of Indonesian citizen protection at the country’s foreign ministry, said there has been “communication between the Indonesian side with various parties that control the territory of Syria” including with the North Syrian Kurdish Authority linked to the 17 Indonesians.
He said the Indonesian government in its initial discussions obtained information that the group were not fighters, some had spent most of their time in Syria in Daesh jails or other isolated conditions, and had fled Raqqa with the help of a third party on June 10.
“Our communication with these parties is more directed to the humanitarian situation,” Iqbal said, noting the family includes teenagers and three young children. “The security conditions in the area are so complex that the handling process cannot be done easily,” he said.
Last month, an Associated Press team in Raqqa met with members of an Indonesian family of 17 and reported on their journey two years ago from Jakarta to Raqqa and their initial desire to live in the Daesh group’s self-proclaimed capital.
They also told the AP of how their dreams were crushed in the face of Daesh brutality and terror and how different the reality of life under Daesh was from the utopian dream of an Islamic society they had pursued.
The AP met the women and children at a camp for the displaced run by the Kurdish forces just north of Raqqa, after they had managed to escape.
The AP also interviewed a male relative at a security center run by Kurdish forces in Kobani.