Iraq says it will prosecute French ISIL fighters

Iraqi President Barham Saleh has said that 13 French Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) detainees who were transferred to Iraq last week from Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) custody will be tried in Iraq.

The announcement on Monday came during an official two day-visit by the Iraqi president to France where he met with his French counterpart Emmanuel Macron.

“They are accused of having commanded operations against Iraqis and Iraqi installations in Iraq,” Salih told a press conference in Paris.

“They will be tried according to Iraqi law,” he added. “We are acting within the confines of international law on this matter.”

WATCH: France ISIL fighters: Repatriating fighters and families (02:32)

Salih, who refused to identify the French citizens nor comment on their cases, said that the decision to prosecute the 13 individuals fell under Iraq’s purview. 

He added that his country would seek to prosecute in Iraq all ISIL (also known as ISIS) fighters who have committed crimes against Iraqis and Iraqi installations in the country.

The United States had called for countries to take back and try their own nationals.

France’s official position states that French “terrorist” fighters “must be tried wherever they committed their crimes.”

France holds that the Iraqi legal authorities are responsible for handling the cases of ISIL members on their territory.

The issue of captured foreign fighters in Syria poses a major conundrum for countries whose nationals have been detained there.

The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces is holding more than 900 foreign fighters in prisons it runs in the country’s north, many of them Iraqis and Europeans.

According to an Iraqi government statement issued Monday, about 280 Iraqi ISIL fighters have been handed over by the SDF to Iraq in two successive batches last week, out of a total of more than 500.

Also last week, a French diplomatic official, and a SDF official said they were trying to verify reports that Fabien Clain, a Frenchman who is one of Europe’s most-wanted members of ISIL, was killed in an airstrike in Syria.

The French presidency said France intends to reaffirm its full support to Iraq regarding its security, stability, inclusive governance and the country’s reconstruction.

Both countries also are seeking to strengthen economic cooperation.

France remains militarily involved in Iraq  and has troops in the country providing training and logistical support to Iraqi forces, as well as intelligence.

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