“It is incomprehensible for other members of this council to be satisfied with a solution that ignores the security implications of allowing foreign terrorist fighters to plan their escape from limited detention centers and leaving the family circle to suffer in camps without recourse, without choice or hope,” he said monday.
Craft said last week that Trump’s management was disappointed that Indonesia’s efforts to draft “a meaningful Array solution. . . have been hampered by the refusal of council members to come with repatriation. “
It was a reference to Western Europeans, in particular by adding Britain and France, who opposed the return of IS fighters and their families, unless in the case of orphans and some children. The British government says detainees in Syria and Iraq deserve to face it than try in the UK.
Craft said the United States is taking the house of its citizens and will pursue them if necessary. He quoted U. S. Secretary of State Mike Pompeo, saying, “We need each and every country to get its citizens back. That’s the first step. It is imperative that they do so. “then. “
A spokesman for the British Ministry of Foreign Affairs, speaking with the same anonymity as ever, said after the vote: “We who have not been adopted by the solution. We work strongly with foreign partners to reduce the collective threat posed by foreign fighters. “
Indonesia Djani regretted that the solution had not been adopted and said it addressed problems similar to the prosecution, rehabilitation and reintegration of suspected terrorists.
“This sends a signal that the Council is not united in the fight against terrorism, and I actually have happened this,” he said.
The rejected solution supported the return of children, but fighters or families.
He encouraged all countries to cooperate to address the risk posed by “foreign terrorist fighters” or FTFs,” adding that through their prosecution, preventing radicalization leading to terrorism and the recruitment of FTF and members of the accompanying family circle, especially accompanying children, by adding children to facilitate return to their home country , if required and on a case-by-case basis. »
The Islamic State organization, which once controlled large swaths of Iraq and Syria, lost its last Syrian strongholds in early 2019, but despite the loss of its so-called caliphate, UN experts said this year that the extremist organization is launching ambitious Syria and Iraq and supplies for the escape of their fighters to detention centers.
UN counter-terrorism chief Vladimir Voronkov said in July that he had won reports that another 700 people had recently died in two camps in northeastern Syria, al-Hol and Roj, where more than 70,000 women are being held. and young people connected with Islamic State fighters. “Very dreadful conditions”.
The camps are overseen by Kurdish-led forces that have allied with the United States and led the fight against the Islamic State fighters.
The International Crisis Group reported on 7 April that there were 66,000 women and young people in al-Hol and 4,000 in Roj, mostly relatives of IS extremists, “but some former affiliates of the organization. “The Brussels-based expert group said most are Syrians or Iraqis, with more or less divided figures, and about 13,500 from other countries.
The organization said aid described detention sites “as TB-affected and dangerously overcrowded, and one of them described them as ‘dramatic mortality rates’. “Since then, this has worsened through the COVID-19 crisis.
In addition to the al-Hol and Roj camps, Kurdish fighters keep thousands of IS fighters and children in prisons.
Voronkov suggested that the foreign network take care of the “big problem” of what to do with these people, and said keeping them in camp “is very dangerous. “
He warned that “they can create highly explosive tissues that can be very useful for terrorists to resume their activities” in Syria and Iraq.