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Wednesday, May 21, 2025

Activists call on Trinidad to repatriate citizens in Syria

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813 days ago
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Hu­man Rights Watch on Tues­day called on Trinidad & To­ba­go to repa­tri­ate more than 90 of its cit­i­zens who have been de­tained as Is­lam­ic State sus­pects and fam­i­ly mem­bers in war-torn Syr­ia, not­ing that at least 56 of them are chil­dren.

Some of them were whisked to Syr­ia as chil­dren by rel­a­tives, while oth­ers said they er­ro­neous­ly thought they were go­ing to vis­it a Mus­lim utopia.

“These chil­dren nev­er chose to live un­der ISIS, yet they are suf­fer­ing be­cause of their par­ents’ de­ci­sions,” said Jo Beck­er, the Hu­man Rights Watch child ad­vo­ca­cy di­rec­tor.

Most of the Trinida­di­ans were de­tained in late 2018 and ear­ly 2019 by U.S.-backed Syr­i­an forces fight­ing the Is­lam­ic State group in north­east Syr­ia and are cur­rent­ly held in makeshift camps that ac­tivists say are dan­ger­ous and lack food, wa­ter, med­ical care and ed­u­ca­tion.

Of the more than 90 Trinida­di­ans de­tained in Syr­ia, some 21 are women, and 44 of the at least 56 chil­dren de­tained are 12 years old or younger, ac­cord­ing to the hu­man rights or­ga­ni­za­tion, which said it in­ter­viewed six Trinida­di­ans held in camps.

Among them is a 17-year-old boy whose fa­ther took him to Syr­ia in 2014.

“My fa­ther lied to me. He told me that we were go­ing to Dis­ney­land,” the or­ga­ni­za­tion quot­ed the boy as say­ing. “It’s not my fault. It’s my fa­ther’s fault. …. I just want to come back home.”

A 19-year-old Trinida­di­an man said: “My dad told me I was go­ing to go to a ho­tel in Egypt and swim in a pool. I was 11 years old,” ac­cord­ing to the or­ga­ni­za­tion.

Trinidad & To­ba­go has repa­tri­at­ed on­ly a hand­ful of its cit­i­zens in re­cent years de­spite at least 130 of them trav­el­ing to ISIS-held ter­ri­to­ries from 2013 to 2016, the most peo­ple per capi­ta of any coun­try in the West­ern Hemi­sphere, ac­cord­ing to Hu­man Rights Watch.

Many of them came from three com­mu­ni­ties in Trinidad: Rio Claro, Ch­agua­nas and Diego Mar­tin. One of them was even fea­tured as a fight­er in an ISIS on­line mag­a­zine.

Links to ter­ror­ism are not rare for the twin-is­land na­tion, which was the site of the on­ly Is­lam­ic re­volt in the West­ern Hemi­sphere when a rad­i­cal group launched a vi­o­lent coup at­tempt in 1990. Some of the vet­er­ans of that coup have since helped to rad­i­cal­ize fam­i­lies, which in turn have rad­i­cal­ized com­mu­ni­ties, ac­cord­ing to ex­perts.

With no courts avail­able in north­east Syr­ia to pros­e­cute sus­pect­ed for­eign ISIS mem­bers, Hu­man Rights Watch ar­gued that au­thor­i­ties in Trinidad could pros­e­cute cit­i­zens once they’re repa­tri­at­ed, not­ing that a 2005 an­ti-ter­ror­ism act gives of­fi­cials ju­ris­dic­tion over those of­fens­es even if they’re com­mit­ted abroad.

The of­fice of Trinidad’s prime min­is­ter did not im­me­di­ate­ly re­spond to a re­quest for com­ment.

In 2018, the gov­ern­ment cre­at­ed a com­mit­tee to repa­tri­ate and rein­te­grate Trinida­di­ans from con­flict ar­eas, but of­fi­cials are still work­ing on draft pol­i­cy and leg­is­la­tion.

At least 10 coun­tries in­clud­ing neigh­bor­ing Bar­ba­dos have repa­tri­at­ed some of their cit­i­zens since Oc­to­ber last year, ac­cord­ing to Hu­man Rights Watch.

By DÁNI­CA CO­TO

SAN JUAN, Puer­to Ri­co (AP)

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