Process: IS returnee from central Hesse convicted

process
IS returnee from central Hesse convicted

An IS returnee had to answer before the Frankfurt Higher Regional Court. photo

© Arne Dedert/dpa

A young woman from central Hesse joins the terrorist organization IS in Syria. Together with her small children she soon has to flee from the civil war. In Germany she is brought before a court.

Almost four years after returning from Syria is one Woman sentenced to two years probation in Frankfurt for membership in the terrorist organization Islamic State (IS). She promoted the association from within, said the presiding judge when the verdict was pronounced before the higher regional court.

The verdict is also a violation of the duty of care because the 33-year-old took her young sons to Syria and exposed them to the dangers of the civil war there. As a condition of probation, the woman, who comes from central Hesse, has to work 300 hours in a non-profit capacity, and a probation officer will also take care of her.

The woman, who grew up in middle-class circumstances, had already been interested in Islam as a teenager. Soon she dressed in long robes and a headscarf. She graduated from high school with an average grade of 1.6. Soon after, she married a Muslim and lived strictly according to the rules of her new religion. Her sons were born in 2012 and 2013.

Husband died in air raid in front of children

In 2016, she and her children were smuggled to Syria via Turkey using forged papers, where her husband was an IS fighter. According to the verdict, she immediately joined the terrorist organization. The IS paid her husband, gave money for the sons and the family’s apartment. She herself sold homemade sweets at markets according to IS specifications.

When the bombings increased, the family fled. Her husband later died in an air raid in front of the children. “She has grossly violated her duties as a mother,” the judge said. On her escape she lived with her children in burrows and in barn-like buildings at times, five of them fled on a motorbike and on foot through the desert. In vain did the woman look for smugglers to take her abroad. She was finally brought to Germany from a refugee camp together with her children in November 2019 as part of a return campaign organized by the Federal Foreign Office.

The court recognized her “reflected and remorseful confession,” the judge said. Today she is about to complete her studies and lives in stable circumstances. The woman’s lawyer said the verdict would be accepted. The federal prosecutor’s office made no statement about the possible filing of an appeal.

dpa

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