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Norway repatriates Daesh-linked woman, children from Syria

Norway repatriates Daesh-linked woman, children from Syria
People walk on the street, where Islamic State leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi declared his caliphate back in 2014, in the old city of Mosul, Iraq, October 27, 2019. (Reuters)
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Updated 14 January 2020

Norway repatriates Daesh-linked woman, children from Syria

Norway repatriates Daesh-linked woman, children from Syria

OSLO: Norway said Tuesday it was repatriating from Syria a woman linked to the Daesh group and her two children, one of them reportedly seriously ill, citing humanitarian reasons.
Foreign Minister Ine Eriksen Soreide, confirming the operation to bring them home, told reporters: “We are doing that for humanitarian reasons because we fear the child is sick.”
The government had until now refused calls to bring back the five-year-old, who according to media reports may be suffering from cystic fibrosis, unless his mother let him travel alone.
But the right-wing administration relented, allowing the three to travel to Norway from the Kurd-controlled camp at Al-Hol, northeast Syria, where they have been detained since March 2019.
Norwegian daily Aftenpost published a photo of the 29-year-old veiled mother, taken they said as she crossed from Syria into Iraq with her two children and two men. All the faces in the photo were blurred out.
The mother, who is described as Pakistani, is accused of having traveled to Syria in 2013 and married a Norwegian extremist who was killed in fighting.
She faces arrest when she gets to Norway on suspicion of belonging to a terrorist organization.
Since the collapse of the Daesh group’s so-called caliphate, the international community has been grappling with the problem of what to do with captured foreign nationals who fought with them.
While Norway has acknowledged the rights of former extremists to return home, it has until now refused to help them, except in the case of lone children.