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Suspected woman Daesh member returned to Germany

Suspected woman Daesh member returned to Germany
Named only as Laura H., she was not immediately arrested on arrival and remains the subject of an investigation on suspicion of membership of a terrorist organization as well as failure to properly care for her children. (File/AFP)
Updated 24 November 2019

Suspected woman Daesh member returned to Germany

Suspected woman Daesh member returned to Germany
  • The woman arrived from Erbil, Iraq
  • Her passport was confiscated and she is banned from leaving Germany

FRANKFURT AM MAIN, Germany: A woman believed to have belonged to Daesh and her three children has arrived back in her home country Germany, police told AFP Sunday.
The woman is the first adult female Daesh member to have been returned through official channels to Germany from Syria.
Named only as Laura H., the 30-year-old from Hesse state arrived at Frankfurt airport late Saturday on a flight from Erbil, Iraq.
While Laura H. was not immediately arrested on arrival, she remains the subject of an investigation on suspicion of membership of a terrorist organization as well as failure to properly care for her children, news weekly Der Spiegel reported citing security sources.
Her passport has been confiscated and she has been banned from leaving the country, while her children are being entrusted to a close reative, Spiegel added.
According to the magazine, she travelled in 2016 from Giessen in central Germany to Syria with her children and her husband, a Somalia-born US citizen, where she joined Daesh.
She had already been linked to Salafist circles in Germany and allegedly posted an online call for aid donations for Syria that in reality went to a fundamentalist group.
Following her husband’s reported killing and her own capture by Kurdish security forces, Laura H. claims to have turned away from Daesh ideology.
A US aid organization helped bring her to Erbil from the Al-Hol prison camp in northeastern Syria, Spiegel reported.
Kurdish authorities have repeatedly urged Western countries to repatriate their nationals linked to Daesh, but they have been largely reluctant to do so.
A Turkish invasion of northern Syria last month sparked concern of a mass breakout from Kurdish-held jails and camps.
Germany had already brought home a handful of orphans, but no adults until Saturday.
Austria, Belgium, Britain and France have also repatriated some orphaned children, while the United States has repatriated several women and their children.
An Albanian boy taken by his mother to join Daesh in Syria returned to his home in Italy earlier this month.
Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan and Kosovo have all repatriated dozens of women and children.