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Is killing British ISIS fighters the ‘only option’?

RT | October 24, 2017

As the Islamic State (IS, formerly ISIS/ISIL) terrorist group nears collapse, questions remain over the fate of the group’s UK-born fighters. Some 130 Britons who have travelled to Iraq and Syria and fought for IS have already been killed, according to MI5.

In line with the UK government’s policy, conservative Foreign Office Minister Rory Stewart said this week that the “only way” to deal with British IS fighters is “in almost every case” to kill them. Stewart said British IS fighters pose a “serious danger to us” and have relinquished any ties to the UK.

Jihadi Jack

Stewart’s call for what amounts to extrajudicial killings has sparked controversy. Sally Lane, whose son Jack Letts journeyed to Syria to join IS in 2014, called the comments “absolutely unbelievable.”

The mother and her husband are currently on a week-long hunger strike to raise awareness about their son’s situation. Dubbed in the press ‘Jihadi Jack,’ Lane is thought be languishing in a prison in north western Syria after being captured by an anti-IS YPG unit in May.

“A lot of people went for naive reasons. Jack was 18 when he went, he was a stupid kid but he’s been labelled a murderous jihadi,” his mother told the Times.

It is not yet clear whether Jack Letts will be returned to the UK to face trial.

The White Widow

For those who do not fall into the hands of anti-IS groups, their fate is, chillingly, a little more certain.

IS-recruiter Sally-Anne Jones, the so-called ‘White Widow,’ was killed in a US airstrike in July alongside her 12-year-old son Jojo as she fled Raqqa. The airstrike could be deemed unlawful and breaking international humanitarian law, as Jones was not participating in an active combat role for IS, nor engaged in hostilities when she was targeted.

Upon the news of Jones’ death, Defence Secretary Michael Fallon said those who choose to fight for IS become a “legitimate target” and “run the risk every hour of every day of being on the wrong end of an RAF or a United States missile.”

It is unclear whether Jones’ role as an IS-recruiter counts as a combat role.

An Alternative?

The head of the government’s independent reviewer of terrorist legislation, Max Hill QC, has recommended that those Britons who were “brainwashed” or joined IS with a sense of “naivety” could be spared criminal prosecution.

“Really we should be looking at reintegration and moving away from any notion that we are going to lose a generation from this,” said Hill.

Labour leader Jeremy Corbyn said he would like to see British IS recruits arrested and tried in British courts. The position is endorsed by the Stop the War Coalition, whose convener, Lindsey German, said the UK’s “strike to kill policy” lacks “justification” and would only increase the risk of terrorism.

October 24, 2017 - Posted by | Timeless or most popular, War Crimes | , , ,

3 Comments »

  1. …..”conservative Foreign Office Minister Rory Stewart said this week that the “only way” to deal with British IS fighters is “in almost every case” to kill them. Stewart said British IS fighters pose a “serious danger to us”

    Well, they don’t want the ISIS ISIL fighters going home to Britain and telling the truth about what really happened, do they? “Dead men tell no tales”

    Like

    Comment by Brian Harry, Australia | October 25, 2017 | Reply

  2. The British isis daesh mercenaries were recruited by MI5 / MI6 / NATO contractors to effect US, Israeli and NATO insurgency objectives. They were led, trained, armed and supported by NATO officers. If the recruits are disposable then so are the officers who were directed to lead them. The only reason the recruits are being disposed of is because they can provide evidence about who recruited and employed them in terrorism. Not likely any unreliable recruits are going to make it back to testify about the war crimes they were employed to commit. m\\

    Like

    Comment by Michael\\ | October 25, 2017 | Reply

    • “LIKE”

      Like

      Comment by Brian Harry, Australia | October 25, 2017 | Reply


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