France: The judiciary accuses 10 women returned by Paris from ISIS camp

France: The judiciary accuses 10 women returned by Paris from ISIS camp

Following France’s Thursday return of 15 women from the Syrian terrorist detention facilities, 10 of them were charged with being members of a terrorist group.
The women who had been issued against them are a memo of research and investigation, who had been under reserve detention since their arrival in French territory and one of them was charged with crimes against humanity and genocide.

Some of them were also accused of avoiding their legal obligations to look after their kids, risking the wellbeing and safety of kids.
The statement of the Public Prosecution for Combating Terrorism touched on a 19-year-old young woman who had been brought to the Iraqi-Syrian region when she was a child, and indicated that no elements are available until the time that allows her to be charged.

The Public Prosecution also took into account that one of the women’s health prevented her from appearing before the investigating judge.
40 children were all arrested in the jihadist detention facilities in northeastern Syria, which were under the control of the Kurdish troops, along with these women, who ranged in age from 19 to 42.

These ladies, many of whom were born in Syria, are French women who voluntarily travelled to terrorist-controlled areas in Iraq and Syria. They were apprehended following the defeat of ISIS.
In a statement released on Thursday, the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs said that the shortcuts to child care had been provided and that they would be given social and medical follow-up. Adults were turned up to the appropriate judicial authorities.

“16 mothers and 35 youngsters were returned to France on July 5, making this the greatest repatriation operation of this kind in the past three months. In the meantime, a mother and her two kids received a return in early October.
Olivier Firan, a spokesman for the French government, stated that additional “collective restoration operations” will be conducted following the second replay phase, implying that this will happen “gradually.”

There are still 100 women and roughly 250 children living in camps in Syria, according to information provided by the anti-terrorism authorities in July of last year.

10 women retrieved by Paris from an ISIS camp are charged by the judiciary in France.

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