The United Nations has urged more than fifty countries to repatriate 10,000 individuals from the families of ISIS terrorists who hold citizenship in these countries.
The Syrian Arab News Agency (SANA) reported that UN human rights experts called on 57 countries to restore approximately 10,000 individuals from the families of ISIS terrorists who hold their nationalities and are located in northeastern Syria. They emphasized the need for the countries to prosecute the adults among them for war crimes or other offenses committed there. In a joint statement, the experts asserted that these countries must commit to returning these individuals according to international law and prosecuting the adults for war crimes or other offenses in their local courts.
In her press briefing, UN Special Rapporteur on the protection of human rights in the context of terrorism, Fuad O’Neill, stated that returning these individuals to their home countries is "extremely urgent." Recent statistics from the international organization indicate that there are nearly "9,462" foreign women and children who arrived with terrorists, facilitated by foreign states and intelligence agencies, notably Turkey and its leader, Recep Tayyip Erdoğan.
Syria has been facing a new type of terrorist war for years, characterized by multinational international terrorism supported by Arab, regional, and Western countries that have sent terrorists from all corners of the world to Syria in an attempt to undermine its national and patriotic stance and the independence of its decision-making.