Women caught in Syria during fight against ISIS returning to Canada | 24CA News

World
Published 05.04.2023
Women caught in Syria during fight against ISIS returning to Canada  | 24CA News

Canadian ladies captured in the course of the defeat of ISIS are on their manner house after the federal authorities agreed to convey them again from Syria.

“I’m told that they’re on the move,” Ottawa lawyer Lawrence Greenspon, who represents their households, stated Wednesday.

Three of the ladies detained in Syria are former Edmonton residents, whereas the opposite three lived within the Toronto space earlier than leaving Canada.

But it was unclear all six ladies had made it out, and Greenspon stated he didn’t know what awaited them upon arrival.

Read extra:

Victim stabbed by alleged ISIS supporter aboard B.C. bus says assault was unprovoked

The RCMP wouldn’t say whether or not the ladies would face arrest for allegedly collaborating within the so-called Islamic State.

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Police would additionally not say if the ladies can be positioned on terrorism peace bonds to guard the general public, or if the youngsters returning with them can be apprehended.

“Working closely with the Public Prosecution Service Canada, the RCMP will lay criminal charges when there is supporting evidence and when it is deemed in the public interest to proceed,” stated Cpl. Kim Chamberland.

The Canadian Security Intelligence Service stated solely that it might “use all legal measures at its disposal to mitigate any risks that may be posed by individuals returning to Canada.”


Kimberly Polman after being launched from custody at provincial court docket, in Chilliwack, B.C., on Oct. 27, 2022. She was arrested on a terrorism peace bond upon coming back from Syria. THE CANADIAN PRESS/Darryl Dyck.


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The six ladies left Canada and have been taken prisoner by U.S.-backed Kurdish fighters in northeast Syria within the years main as much as the rout of ISIS in 2019.

The Canadian authorities initially declined to assist repatriate them, however in December officers agreed to take action after their households appealed to the Federal Court.

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A seventh girl, who’s from Quebec and has six youngsters, was additionally at a Syrian detention camp however was not scheduled to return with the others as a result of she was nonetheless present process a danger evaluation, Greenspon stated.

A Vancouver girl, Rida Jabbar, was additionally amongst these initially in search of to return, however she and her two youngsters went lacking final yr and haven’t been situated. “I only know that we have lost communication with her,” stated Greenspon.

Jabbar is the spouse of Muhammad Ali, a Mississauga, Ont., extremist who joined ISIS in 2014 and known as for assaults in Canada. He is detained by Kurdish fighters in Syria.

Asiya Hirji, a Toronto lawyer who represents two different ladies detained in Syria, additionally stated she discovered from her purchasers the Canadians had been taken out of their camp. Hirji’s purchasers aren’t Canadians and aren’t amongst these returning, though their six youngsters have Canadian citizenship by means of their fathers.


The Al-Hawl Camp, the place many of the households seize in the course of the battle towards ISIS are detained.

Canadian legislation prohibits taking part in terrorism, however officers have struggled with such circumstances as a result of challenges of gathering proof from abroad warfare zones.

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National safety businesses have as a substitute relied on different instruments for “Canadian Extremist Travellers,” notably peace bonds, surveillance, the no-fly record and refusal of passports.

Terrorism peace bonds impose an inventory of circumstances suspects should observe or face arrest, comparable to sporting an ankle bracelet and collaborating in a de-radicalization program.

De-radicalization packages standing by

In Edmonton, the Organization for the Prevention of Violence (OPV) stated it was out there to help the ladies returning to town, in addition to their households.

Funded by the federal authorities and the City of Edmonton, the OPV runs an intervention program began in 2019 that helps extremists disengage from hate and violence.

Read extra:

Edmonton girl ‘committed’ to ISIS ‘facilitated extremist activities,’ secret paperwork allege

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“Mainly what we do is just try and get the person’s life in order, as a way to build trust so they feel comfortable discussing ideology with us,” stated Michael King, the OPV’s director of analysis.

He stated a number of the Canadian ladies have been at susceptible ages once they left for Syria and Iraq and had already deserted extremism on account of their experiences.

“We know some of them have completely disengaged with ISIS ideology. They’re so done with it, they don’t want anything to do with it,” King stated.

Rules round confidentiality prevented King from saying whether or not the group was already working with any of the households getting ready for the challenges of supporting the ladies and their youngsters.


Click to play video: 'Toronto woman captured in Syria says husband tricked her into going to Syria'

Toronto girl captured in Syria says husband tricked her into going to Syria


But he stated this system was there ought to they ask for assist, or ought to the courts get them organized to take part. “We are available to them, as we are to anyone else who is looking to disengage,” King stated.

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Canadian Yazidis condemn authorities for returning ladies

Among these disenchanted the federal government helps the ladies return are Yazidis, the Iraqi minority group focused by ISIS. In what has been acknowledged as a genocide, ISIS executed Yazidi males and enslaved ladies and women.

The Canadian Yazidi Association stated the federal government’s determination to repatriate ladies suspected of involvement in ISIS has left the group feeling “abandoned and unsupported.”

“The decision has undone years of progress towards healing and rebuilding the community in Canada,” stated Jamileh Naso, president of the Winnipeg-based non-profit group.

In this Jan. 29, 2015 photo, a Kurdish peshmerga fighter fires toward positions of the Islamic State group near Sinjar, once home to many of Iraq’s Yazidi religious minority.

In this Jan. 29, 2015 picture, a Kurdish peshmerga fighter fires towards positions of the Islamic State group close to Sinjar, as soon as house to lots of Iraq’s Yazidi spiritual minority.


Bram Janssen/AP Photo

She stated that whereas the federal government was serving to convey ladies with alleged hyperlinks to ISIS to Canada, Yazidis have been making little headway in persuading Ottawa to resettle their households.

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Although ladies who joined ISIS performed an lively position within the Yazidi genocide, there appeared little probability they might face prices in Canada as a result of problem of gathering proof overseas, she stated.

“Ultimately, the decision to prioritize the repatriation and reunification of individuals with links to ISIS not only fails to address the ongoing trauma experienced by survivors but also undermines the progress made in rebuilding the Yazidi community in Canada,” she stated.

“This demonstrates a significant misalignment of priorities for a government that claims to champion women’s rights and seek justice for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence around the world.”

Only certainly one of three ladies already returned from Syria charged

Three Canadian ladies have already returned from the camps. The first, an Alberta resident, was arrested on a terrorism peace bond after arriving in November 2021. She can’t be named resulting from a publication ban.

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Last October, B.C. resident Kimberly Polman was additionally arrested on a peace bond when she returned with one other detainee, Oumaima Chouay of Quebec, who was charged with 4 counts of terrorism.

Read extra:

Canadian girl launched from camp for ISIS detainees in Syria arrested at airport

Global Affairs Canada agreed in December to repatriate the remaining half-dozen Canadian ladies and their youngsters after their households launched a court docket case towards the federal government.

The court docket additionally ordered the federal government to return 4 males who possess Canadian citizenship, however the judgment was stayed on March 14 whereas the federal government appealed. The enchantment was heard on March 27.

The ladies believed to have been detained embody Edmonton’s Helena Carson, who allegedly travelled to Syria together with her husband, his sister and his sister’s husband. It was unclear they have been amongst these returning.

Carson’s mom stated in a collection of textual content messages that her daughter was “innocent of all accusations” and claimed the ladies had been “demonized every which way and by ALL MEDIA OUTLETS.”

She stated she had spoken to CSIS and the FBI when her daughter was detained on the Al-Hol camp in Syria.

“Whatever happened or whatever hasn’t prior to Al Hol I do not know. I only know why they left to where they went which obviously was NOT Syria, so does [Sic] ALL authorities involved in this.”

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Click to play video: 'Canadian woman detained in Syria says she accepts she could face prosecution'

Canadian girl detained in Syria says she accepts she may face prosecution


Police in Ontario have been additionally getting ready for the return of the ladies. Their identities haven’t been made public however amongst these in custody was a girl who stated she grew up in Toronto’s Dixon Road neighborhood earlier than marrying a Lebanese man she met on-line.

She informed Global News in 2018 he introduced her to Istanbul, and from there she was taken throughout the Syrian border to Raqqah, the ISIS capital on the time, she stated. She claimed she was unaware of the atrocities ISIS was committing.

Another Toronto girl, Dure Ahmed, was recognized by the New York Times in 2019 as having been captured in Syria, whereas the BBC reported a Canadian named Ammar Anjar had married a British ISIS fighter and was captured.

Although ISIS now not holds territory in Syria or Iraq, its ultraviolent ideology nonetheless lingers on the web. Last week, RCMP arrested a Montreal resident over considerations about ISIS.

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Mohamed Amine Assal, an 18-year-old CEGEP pupil over, was arrested on a terrorism peace bond after the FBI tipped off the RCMP to his alleged discussions on social media about conducting assaults.

According to RCMP allegations filed in court docket, he promoted “violent jihad,” translated ISIS supplies and counselled an internet contact on explosives.

In British Columbia, a suspect accused of attacking transit passengers with a knife on April 1 was charged with 4 counts of terrorism after he allegedly stated he had accomplished it for ISIS.

Stewart.Bell@globalnews.ca