A Frenchman dies of a suites of a disease in a jihadist women camp in Syria

Arrival in 2014 in Syria and imprisoned since 2019, she had diabetes for several years. His 6 year old daughter is today orphan.

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Tuesday morning December 14, Maya (the first name was changed) woke up with “extremely bad”. Diabetes and insulin-dependent patient, she asked the Kurdish guardians of the Roj camp, in which she has been held since the fall of the caliphate of the Islamic State Organization, in February 2019, to be transported to the nearest hospital for Y undergo dialysis. According to his lawyer, Marie dosed, upon his arrival at the hospital of Derik City, two hours later, Maya lost the use of one leg, then the view. She died soon after. His body has been repatriated at the camp to be buried in the day, in the presence of his 6-year-old girl, Sarah (the first name was changed), who was entrusted to other French detainees. The Father, him, had been killed during fighting.

This death is the first of this type concerning a French in the Roj camp, reserved for European prisoners. The case of Maya, 28, part in Syria in 2014, was nevertheless well known from the French authorities, regularly informed by M e dosed of his state of health. “It’s been a long time since she was asking to be repatriated and he was letting it knowly,” a lawyer accuses the lawyer.

The latter has read on Wednesday at a press conference in Paris, several of the dozens of alarming letters that she sent to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Elysee in the last two years. All remained unanswered. Yet French diplomats, accompanied by special forces members, surrendered in January in the camp to repatriate seven children presented as orphans. “They went a few meters from Maya’s tent and let it burst there,” M e dosed.

New missed opportunity: In February, women held invested that a list of the sickest women was being developed for a possible repatriation, Marie Dosing attracted the attention of Paris, again , on “the absolute urgency” to repatriate Maya. In vain.

“France has made an orphan”

French policy, concerning the some 80 jihadist women and 200 French children held in Syria, is that of the “case by case”: it consists of repatriating children to the dropper (35 until now), presumed Because they are orphans, but absolutely refuses any repatriation of adult women.

The collective of the united families, which represents the parents and relatives of these women, militates for a repatriation of everyone, women and children. Two of its members were present alongside M e dosed on Wednesday to corroborate his testimony. “France has made an orphan, lamented the lawyer. I do not know if she will repatriate her now that her mother is dead.”

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/Media reports.