Europe fears attacks by returning Daesh fighters

Europe fears attacks by returning Daesh fighters

Hundreds of fighters took advantage of deal between PKK/PYD and Daesh to leave Raqqa, Times newspaper reports

By Sorwar Alam and Kubra Chohan

ANKARA (AA) - Europe is in fear of terrorist attacks by returning Daesh fighters following an agreement between the PKK/PYD and Daesh terror groups in the Syrian city of Raqqa, according to a report.

Britain’s The Times newspaper said Tuesday that hundreds of Daesh terrorists left Raqqa under the agreement and used smuggling routes to enter Europe, although some were arrested while trying to cross the border into Turkey.

But many “took advantage of the movement during the evacuation deal to get to Turkey,” the report cited Saddam al-Hamadi, one of the detainees, as saying.

Al-Hamadi said he travelled through PKK/PYD-held territories in northern Syria and the terror group “didn’t ask anything”.

The PYD and its military wing YPG are Syrian branches of the PKK, which has waged war against Turkey for more than 30 years.

Al-Hamadi was arrested by the Turkey-backed Free Syrian Army in al-Rai, one of the cities in northern Syria liberated from Daesh during Operation Euphrates Shield earlier this year.

“It was an easy route to cross. Even if the YPG [PKK/PYD] catch you, you will be held for 10 or 15 days and then released,” he told the Times reporter.

The Times noted that his testimony “adds to fears that ISIS [Daesh] fighters who were allowed to leave Raqqa are now heading back to Europe to launch attacks”.

The report also said the U.K. was concerned about Daesh terrorists returning home, adding that tensions between European states over Brexit could make their way easier.

“The UK is genuinely worried about the return of ISIS [Daesh] fighters. There are also concerns that intelligence information may not be shared [between countries] as quickly as it was because of the bad blood over Brexit,” it cited a source close to UK intelligence agencies as saying.

The BBC reported on Nov. 15 that the deal was struck between Daesh and the SDF, an armed Syrian group dominated by the terrorist PKK/PYD.

After speaking to many of those involved in the evacuation, the British broadcaster said a huge convoy consisting of around 50 trucks, 13 buses and more than 100 Daesh vehicles left Raqqa for Daesh-controlled territory to the southeast.

The report said Daesh also withdrew at least 10 vehicles loaded with arms and ammunition and the fighters included foreigners alongside Iraqis and Syrians.

But the Pentagon on Nov. 15 defended the deal, which allowed hundreds of Daesh terrorists to escape Raqqa, calling this part of a “local solution to a local issue,” namely the siege of Daesh’s de-facto capital in Syria.

Pentagon spokesperson Eric Pahon claimed it aimed to provide civilians and families “an opportunity to leave the city and to allow tribal leaders an opportunity to reconcile and reintegrate Syrian men who had been under ISIS [Daesh] control during its brutal three-year regime”.

Pahon denied that any representatives of the U.S.-led coalition against Daesh participated in the withdrawal negotiations, although they were “present at the discussions”.

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