France’s female militants ‘should face trial in Syria’
January 05, 2018
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PARIS: Female French militants arrested in Kurdish-held parts of Syria should face justice there so long as they can be guaranteed a fair trial, the French government said on Thursday.

Debate has been swirling in France over the fate of women who went to Syria to marry fighters and now find themselves in custody, following a series of defeats for the Daesh group.

This week Emilie Konig, a 33-year-old from Brittany who became a notorious militant recruiter, became the latest of a string of European women to plead publicly to be repatriated.

But French government spokesman Benjamin Griveaux indicated on Thursday that there were no plans to bring her home.

If “there are legal institutions capable of guaranteeing a fair trial assuring their right to a defence,” women arrested in Kurdish-held Syria should be “judged there,” Griveaux told RMC radio.

“Whatever crime may have been committed — even the most despicable — French citizens abroad must have a guaranteed right to a defence,” he added. “We must have confirmation of that.”

Konig, who features on UN and US blacklists of dangerous militants, was arrested in early December and is being held in a Kurdish camp with her three young children along with several other French women.

“They have been arrested, and as far as we know they did not surrender of their own accord,” Griveaux said. “They were arrested in combat.”

Konig’s lawyer Bruno Vinay argued on Wednesday that France must repatriate her under its “international commitments.”

A policeman’s daughter who converted after meeting her first husband, Konig set off for Syria in 2012, leaving her first two children in France to join her new partner, who was later killed.

She frequently appeared in propaganda videos and French intelligence intercepted messages to her contacts at home urging them to attack French institutions or the wives of soldiers.

Agence France-Presse
 

 
 
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