MUNICH: Baghdad needs more financial assistance to deal with the influx Daesh detainees, Iraq’s Foreign Minister Fuad Hussein said Friday, adding he was worried about a rise in Daesh activity just over the border in Syria.
Speaking in a wide-ranging interview on the sidelines of the Munich Security Conference, Hussein said thousands of detainees had so far been transferred from Syrian prisons to Iraq, adding that the process was continuing.
And he said Iraq was in talks with countries to repatriate them soon.
Daesh swept through large swathes of Syria and Iraq in 2014 before it was driven out by a US-led coalition by 2019, and many of its fighters were detained, although remnants of the militant group remain.
The US military said on Jan. 21 it had started to transfer the detainees and expected to move some 7,000 fighters.
The rapid collapse of the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces in northeast Syria had caused uncertainty about the security of prisons and detention camps they were guarding.
Hussein said discussions had started with some Arab and Muslim countries to take back their citizens, but European countries remained hesitant because their legal systems could allow fighters to get out of prison sooner.
"We also started talking to some countries so that they can supply us with financial support, because if those thousands of terrorists stay in Iraq for a long time, I mean, security-wise, it's very dangerous, so we need support from various countries," he said.
Hussein also warned that there had been a recent increase in activities by Daesh in Syria after the Syrian government's offensive against Kurdish-led SDF forces in northeastern Syria.
"As for the ISIS activities in Syria, we are really worried because they are on the other side of the border and they have become very active recently," he said, referring to the terror group by its more commonly used name.
"I think it has to do with the recent conflict between Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian administration or Syrian army. At the same time, there are many people who believe in this ideology inside Syria."
He also said that, while Baghdad took the United States' signals seriously, the nomination of former prime minister Nouri al-Maliki to once again take up the role was an internal issue.
He added that US troops were still due to leave Iraq by the end of 2026.











