Iraq says to start legal proceedings against Islamic State group detainees moved from Syria

BAGHDAD, Iraq (AFP) - Iraq's judiciary said Thursday it would launch legal proceedings against Islamic State group detainees transferred from Syria to Iraq as part of a U.S. operation.

"The Iraqi judiciary will begin standard legal proceedings against the defendants who are received and placed in the relevant correctional institutions," the Supreme Judicial Council said.

The U.S. military said Wednesday it had launched an operation to move 7,000 Islamic State group prisoners from Syria to Iraq, as Syrian government forces moved on facilities long secured by Kurdish-led forces in Syria.

"All suspects, regardless of their nationalities or ranks within the terrorist organization, are subject exclusively to the authority of the Iraqi judiciary, and our judicial procedures will be applied to them all without exception," the judiciary said.

Across the border in Syria, government forces have taken control of swaths of formerly Kurdish-held territory in the north and east.

That has included a deal struck over the weekend between the two sides which will see the Kurds' administration integrated into the state, while the government will take responsibility for Islamic State group prisoners.

On Thursday, U.S. envoy Tom Barrack met Syrian Democratic Forces leader Mazloum Abdi and senior Kurdish official Ilhan Ahmed in Erbil, the presidency of the autonomous northern Kurdistan region of Iraq said.

Barrack posted on X Washington's "strong support for and commitment to advancing the integration process outlined in the January 18 agreement between the Syrian Democratic Forces and the Syrian government."

Of the 7,000 Islamic State group detainees the U.S. military aims to transfer from Syria to Iraq, the government in Baghdad has so far confirmed the arrival of 150.

Thousands of suspected jihadists and their families, including foreigners, have been held in detention centers and camps in Syria since the Islamic State group's defeat in 2019 at the hands of Kurdish-led forces backed by a U.S.-led coalition.

Death sentences, life behind bars

At the height of its power, the Islamic State group held swaths of Syria and Iraq, subjecting populations on both sides of the border to a horrific regime characterized by mass death, sexual slavery of women and girls, and punishment for any dissent.

Iraqi courts have handed down hundreds of death sentences and life terms to people convicted of terrorism offenses, including hundreds of foreign fighters - some caught in Syria and transferred across the border.

In 2019, the courts sentenced 11 French nationals to death. Their sentences were later commuted to life in prison, according to a judicial source.

In September, Iraqi intelligence services were questioning 47 French nationals transferred from Syrian Kurdish custody over their alleged involvement in Islamic State group crimes committed in Iraq.

Some human rights groups have denounced "terrorism" trials in Iraq as rushed.

The country still has mass graves and many personal testimonies of Islamic State group brutality to be investigated.

In 2024, after a mission of the U.N. body investigating Islamic State group crimes ended, Iraq created the National Center for International Judicial Cooperation to gather evidence and document Islamic State group crimes.

The center is the main point of contact for foreign jurisdictions investigating alleged offenses.

-

By Agence France-Presse

Source: Courthouse News Service

More Syria News

Access More

Sign up for Syria News

a daily newsletter full of things to discuss over drinks.and the great thing is that it's on the house!