Islamic State group: Syria's Kurds call for international tribunal


The
Kurdish-led administration in northern Syria has called for the creation of an
international court to try thousands of suspected members of the Islamic State
(IS) group.
One
official, Abdul Karim Omar, told the BBC they were struggling to cope with the
thousands who emerged from the last IS enclave of Baghuz, in the east.
Kurdish-led
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) captured the village last week.
About 1,000
foreign fighters are among the thousands held by Kurds in camps.
US President
Donald Trump hailed the capture of Baghuz last week, although he said the US
would "remain vigilant" as the group remains a threat.
At its
height, IS controlled 88,000 sq km (34,000 sq miles) across Syria and Iraq.
While it no
longer holds this territory, US officials believe IS may have 15,000 to 20,000
armed adherents active in the region, many of them in sleeper cells, and that
it will return to its insurgent roots while attempting to rebuild.
In a
statement, the Kurdish administration called for "a special international
tribunal in north-east Syria to prosecute terrorists" to ensure that
trials are "conducted fairly and in accordance with international law and
human rights covenants and charters".
Speaking to
the BBC, the administration's head of foreign affairs, Abdul Karim Omar, said
the fact so few nations had repatriated their citizens who joined IS has added
to their problems.
The
administration has struggled to cope with even detaining the militants it has
captured, let alone putting them on trial, says the BBC's Aleem Maqbool in
north-eastern Syria.
Many Western
governments have refused to repatriate their citizens amid concerns over the
potential security risks they may pose, as well as the challenges of gathering
evidence to support prosecutions.
The
US-backed SDF forces have reportedly captured more than 5,000 militants - from
Syria and abroad - since January and put them in detention centres, while women
and children are kept in camps for the displaced.
According to
one Kurdish official speaking to AFP, more than 9,000 foreign relatives of IS
members - many of them children - are being held at the Kurdish-run al-Hol
camp.
The
accommodation was built for about 20,000 people but is now housing more than
70,000.
US envoy for
Syria James Jeffrey told reporters on Monday the focus was on repatriating
militants, and "getting countries to take back their own foreign terrorist
fighters".
Iraqis and
Syrians should be sent home "for deradicalisation and reintegration or in
some cases punishment", while countries around the world should be
encouraged to "take back their own citizens".
Asked if the
US was considering an international tribunal, Mr Jeffrey said: "We're not
looking at that right now."
There have
been several international tribunals in the past, including to try war crimes
in the Balkan conflicts of the 1990s and after the Rwandan genocide in 1994.
But
transitional justice expert Joel Hubrecht told AFP news agency that it was
"not realistic" to set up such a court in Syria.
Syria's
Kurdish authorities are not internationally recognised, and ensuring proper
justice in a war-torn country is difficult, he added.
FROM .bbc.com/news/world-middle-east
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