British mother calls for son’s repatriation from Syria

Jack Letts in a 2019 interview. (Screengrab/ITV News)
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Updated 27 January 2026
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British mother calls for son’s repatriation from Syria

  • Jack Letts has been held for more than 9 years without trial after joining Daesh
  • Fears raised for his safety amid US move to transfer thousands of detainees to Iraq

LONDON: A British-born man being held in the Syrian Arab Republic should be repatriated to Canada or the UK, his mother has said.

Jack Letts, 30, joined Daesh aged 18 and was captured by Syrian-Kurdish forces in 2017. He has been held for nine years without trial.

Recent fighting between Syrian government and Kurdish forces has raised concerns about security in the region, with Letts one of 7,000 prisoners who could be moved to more secure locations. 

Last week, US Central Command said it had begun to airlift prisoners out of Kurdish-run prisons. 

US Secretary of State Marco Rubio thanked Iraq’s Prime Minister Mohammed Shia Al-Sudani on Sunday after revealing that 150 of the most dangerous detainees had been sent to “secure facilities” in the neighboring country.

Letts’ mother Sally Lane said she is “frantically trying to find out as much as possible” about her son’s situation.

“We’ve heard absolutely nothing. They think we don’t deserve to know,” she said. “I can’t see that western governments will allow their citizens to be put on trial in Iraq where they have the death penalty and flawed trials.”

Letts was stripped of his UK citizenship in 2019, leaving him with Canadian citizenship as it is the country of his father’s birth.

He has had no contact with his family in the intervening years, but has been interviewed a number of times by Western news outlets.

“I’m not going to say I’m innocent. I’m not innocent. I deserve what comes to me. But I just want it to be … not just haphazard, freestyle punishment in Syria,” he told ITV in 2019.

In a later interview with a Canadian broadcaster, he claimed to have been a victim of Daesh, saying he was imprisoned by the group on three occasions after rejecting its ideology.

Lane said Letts should be returned to the UK or Canada to stand trial if terror charges can be brought. “If there’s evidence, put them on trial. But there is no evidence,” she added.

Rubio and Al-Sudani discussed “ongoing diplomatic efforts to ensure countries rapidly repatriate their citizens in Iraq, bringing them to justice,” the US State Department said.

Lane said she does not believe that her son is significant enough to have been transferred as part of the priority airlift, but voiced concerns after Centcom said it plans to complete the operation in “days not weeks.”

She added: “Jack’s small fry. He’s mostly been held in local prisons. He’s high profile only because he’s been in the news.”

UK Foreign Secretary Yvette Cooper told the BBC last week that she had been “in touch” with Rubio to discuss the situation in Syria, with “shared interests in countering terrorism and extremism” on the agenda. 

The news came after revelations that the UK had repatriated six women and 10 children from Kurdish-run prison camps in northern Syria in recent years, with 55 more people still in detention.


UN: Sudan war civilian death toll more than doubled in 2025

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UN: Sudan war civilian death toll more than doubled in 2025

  • Rights chief Volker Turk says RSF paramilitaries inflicted "carnage” in attacks last year on Zamzam campand El-Fasher in Darfur
  • Recent drone attacks in Kordofan region and elsewhere have 'killed or injured nearly 600 civilians'
GENEVA: Killings of civilians in Sudan’s war more than doubled in 2025 compared with the previous year, the United Nations rights chief said Thursday, warning that thousands more dead are unidentified or remain missing.
Since April 2023, Sudan has been engulfed in a conflict between the army and the Rapid Support Forces (RSF) that has killed tens of thousands, displaced 11 million people and triggered one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
“This war is ugly. It’s bloody and it’s senseless,” Volker Turk told the UN Human Rights Council, blaming both warring sides, which have so far rejected any form of humanitarian truce. He also blamed foreign sponsors funding what he called a “high-tech” conflict.
“In 2025, my office’s documentation points to an over two and a half times increase in killings of civilians compared with the previous year. Many thousands are still missing or unidentified,” Turk said.
There have been no official figures on the overall death toll in the conflict.
Turk condemned what he called the “heinous and ruthless” brutalities committed, including sexual violence, summary executions and arbitrary detentions.
He highlighted “carnage” inflicted by the RSF during an attack on the Zamzam displacement camp in April, and again in October in El-Fasher, which was the army’s last foothold in western Darfur.
Sexual violence, including rape, gang rape, sexual torture and slavery, has also surged, Turk said, with more than 500 victims documented in 2025. “The bodies of Sudanese women and girls have been weaponized to terrorize communities.”
He added that he is “extremely worried these crimes may be repeated.”

- ‘Madness’ -

Since the fall of El-Fasher, the fighting has moved deeper into neighboring Kordofan where drone strikes have killed dozens at a time.
Since January, escalating drone attacks in the southern Kordofan region and beyond have “killed or injured nearly 600 civilians,” Turk said, including in attacks on humanitarian aid convoys.
The UN’s resident and humanitarian coordinator for Sudan, Denise Brown, said on Thursday that access to the cities of Kadugli and Dilling in South Kordofan — long cut off by an RSF siege until the army recently lifted it — had been effectively impossible.
“We were not able to get supplies in. We had to remove our staff for their own safety,” she said, after stepping off the first UN flight to Khartoum since the war began on Thursday.
Famine was declared last November in the North Darfur capital El-Fasher and in Kadugli, the capital of South Kordofan, according to a UN-backed assessment. The same assessment said Dilling in South Kordofan is also likely facing famine conditions.
Turk said both the army and the RSF continued to use “explosive weapons in densely populated areas, often without warning — showing utter disregard for human life.”
Turk highlighted the “increased use of advanced long-range drones,” which has “expanded harm to civilians in areas far from the front lines that were previously peaceful.”
Turk also voiced concern over “the growing militarization of society,” including the recruitment of children and young people into the fighting.