Babies of Daesh ‘caliphate’ languish in limbo, prison

Babies of Daesh ‘caliphate’ languish in limbo, prison
Faouzi Trabelsi shows in Tunis a photo of himself with his grandson, Tamim Jaboudi, who has been trapped in a prison in Libya since his parents, both Tunisians, who left home to join Daesh, died in a US airstrike in February 2016. (AP)
Updated 22 April 2017
Follow

Babies of Daesh ‘caliphate’ languish in limbo, prison

Babies of Daesh ‘caliphate’ languish in limbo, prison

TUNIS: Hundreds of children fathered by Daesh’s foreign fighters or brought to the self-proclaimed caliphate by their parents are now imprisoned or in limbo with nowhere to go, collateral victims as the militant group retreats and home countries hesitate to take them back.
One young Tunisian orphan, Tamim Jaboudi, has been in a prison in Tripoli, Libya, for well over a year. He passed his second birthday behind bars and is nearing another, turning 3 on April 30. His parents, both Tunisians who left home to join Daesh, died in American airstrikes in Libya in February 2016, according to the child’s grandfather, who is trying to win the child’s return.
Tamim now lives among two dozen Tunisian women and their children in Tripoli’s Mitiga prison, raised by a woman who herself willingly joined the terror group. The captives are under guard by a militia that tightly controls access to the group despite repeatedly claiming they have no interest in preventing their return home.
“What is this young child’s sin that he is in jail with criminals?” asked Faouzi Trabelsi, the boy’s grandfather who has traveled twice to Libya to see the boy and twice returned home empty-handed. “If he grows up there, what kind of attitude will he have toward his homeland?”
European governments and experts have documented at least 600 foreign children of fighters who live in or have returned from Daesh territory in Syria, Iraq or Libya. But the numbers are likely far higher.
The children and families often find it impossible to escape Daesh-held areas. And even if they do, their native countries are deeply suspicious and fearful of returnees — sometimes even children.
Although Daesh says women have no role as fighters, France in particular has detained women returnees and some adolescent boys who it believes pose a danger. Young children often go into foster care or end up with extended family. In the Netherlands, anyone over nine is considered a potential security threat, since that is said to be the age Daesh extremists begin teaching boys to kill.
In Libya, their fate is particularly uncertain. The North African nation descended into chaos after the 2011 civil war, which ended with the killing of dictator Muammar Qaddafi. The country has been split into competing governments, each backed by a set of militias, tribes and political factions. Militias in December captured the main Daesh stronghold in Libya, Sirte, effectively breaking the group’s efforts to build territory there, at least for now.
Tunisia is working to bring back the women and 44 children held in Tripoli and elsewhere in Libya. But so far the only result has been repeated hold-ups and miscommunications.