Canada repatriating women, children from Syrian prison camp: BBC

The Syrian repatriation mission is Canada’s largest since the collapse of Daesh. (File/AFP)
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Updated 06 April 2023
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Canada repatriating women, children from Syrian prison camp: BBC

  • Mission is latest effort by a Western country to return nationals in wake of Daesh collapse
  • ‘Situation in northeast Syria incredibly volatile’: Canadian PM Justin Trudeau

LONDON: Canada is repatriating six women and 13 children from a prison camp in northeast Syria, the BBC reported.

It follows an agreement by Canada’s federal government in January to repatriate the group, which includes members who were detained as a result of their associations with Daesh.

But within the repatriation mission, the government vetoed the inclusion of four Canadian men who are also imprisoned in Syria.

The lawyer representing the repatriated Canadians, Lawrence Greenspon, said the women and children were in transit on Wednesday.

He added: “I’ve talked to their various family members here in Canada and they are absolutely delighted that some three-and-a-half years after we started this process of trying to bring the women and children home, their loved ones are on their way.”

The Syrian repatriation mission is Canada’s largest since the collapse of Daesh, and comes as Western countries ramp up efforts to return their citizens from prison camps in the northeast of the country, where more than 42,000 foreign nationals are detained.

Within the group of Canadians, a mother with six children in the camp was subject to security assessments, with the government offering the return of her children without her. It is believed that the mother will return at a later date.

Greenspon said: “Her choice was that she wants the children to be repatriated and her to be with them at the same time.”

Canada’s Prime Minister Justin Trudeau was questioned about whether the government was violating its own policy by separating the mother from her children as part of the repatriation mission.

He said Canada was “engaged with all our responsibilities,” adding: “The situation in north-eastern Syria is incredibly volatile. Canada is watching very, very closely.”

Canada has also arrested several individuals over links to Daesh in the wake of the terror group’s collapse.

In October last year, federal police arrested a woman returning from Syria. She was charged with terror offenses. It followed a similar case in which a “Daesh bride” was arrested after returning to Canada.

The group of four men who were excluded from the latest repatriation mission includes British Canadian Jack Letts, whose citizenship was axed by the UK government.

A Canadian federal court has ordered the government to repatriate the men, who have not faced formal charges but remain imprisoned in Syria. The government has appealed the decision.


Israel army says killed six Gaza militants despite ceasefire

Updated 4 sec ago
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Israel army says killed six Gaza militants despite ceasefire

  • The military said that it had killed two of six militants it had identified adjacent to its troops in western Rafah and that tanks had fired on them

JERUSALEM: The Israeli military said Wednesday it had killed six militants in an updated toll from an exchange of fire in Gaza the day before, accusing them of violating the ceasefire in the territory.
The military said in a statement late on Tuesday that it had killed two of six militants it had identified adjacent to its troops in western Rafah and that tanks had fired on them.
It said they were killed in an ensuing exchange of fire, including aerial strikes, while troops continued to search for the rest.
In a statement on Wednesday, the military said that “following searches that were conducted in the area, it is now confirmed that troops eliminated the six terrorists during the exchange of fire.”
It said the presence of the militants adjacent to troops and the subsequent incident were a “blatant violation of the ceasefire agreement.”
A security source in Gaza reported late on Tuesday that Israeli forces had “opened fire west of Rafah city.”
Under a truce that entered into force in October following two years of war between Israel and Hamas, Israeli forces in Gaza withdrew to positions behind a demarcation known as the “yellow line.”
The city of Rafah is located behind the yellow line, under Israeli army control. The area beyond the yellow line remains under Hamas authority.
Both sides have repeatedly accused the other of violating the ceasefire.
According to the health ministry in Gaza, which operates under Hamas authority, at least 165 children have been killed in Israeli attacks since the ceasefire began on October 10.
The UN children’s agency UNICEF said on Tuesday that at least 100 children — 60 boys and 40 girls — had been killed since the truce.
Israeli forces have killed a total of at least 447 Palestinians in Gaza since the ceasefire took effect, according to the ministry.
The Israeli army says militants have killed three of its soldiers during the same period.