Iraq News

Iraq hands 6-year jail term to German extremist teen

An Iraqi court has sentenced a German teenager to six years in jail for membership of the "Islamic State of Iraq and Syria" (ISIS) and illegal entry into the country, AFP reported Monday (February 19th).

A judicial source said the girl, aged 17, was on Sunday handed a five-year term for belonging to ISIS and one year in prison for crossing illegally into Iraq.

On January 21st, a German woman of Moroccan origin was sentenced to death by hanging on charges of providing "logistical support and helping the terrorist group to carry out crimes".

According to media reports in Germany, the condemned woman, named Lamia K., had left Mannheim in August 2014. She was arrested by Iraqi forces during the final stages last July of the battle for the northern city of Mosul.

At least two other German women are being held in prison in Iraq, including the teenager Linda W., who had disappeared from her home in the summer of 2016, shortly after converting to Islam.

The girl from Pulsnitz in Saxony, in a meeting with German journalists in Baghdad last summer, said she wanted to return to her family and regretted her actions.

In a separate case, a suspected French female extremist, who had been sentenced to seven months in prison for illegal entry into Iraq, was on Monday ordered released and deported on the basis of time served.

Melina Bougedir, 27, was arrested last summer in Mosul with her four children, three of whom have been repatriated to France.

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