Thứ Ba, 19 tháng 2, 2019

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so left it here they call me what's up guys so life of Scott here or just being

super random just got home from work um so my parents gave my wife and I

twenty five pounds of white rice whoa that's a lot of rice look at that new

Blue Ribbon white rice so you know what who's gonna turn down free food not I

hopefully not you because who doesn't like free anyway I need to now become a

master chef or master cook or maybe not a master but we're gonna try so I'm

gonna come up with different ideas for the rice cuz I'm not a really big fan of

white rice I like white rice with cheese and that's about it I don't like it

plain so for a while now I've been wanting to make stuffed peppers so it

kind of got an idea of getting whole peppers boil them cook them then cut the

tops off boil rice get it ready put it inside the peppers then maybe cut up

some turkey cook it put it inside the peppers maybe some kind of sauce or

something chili sauce or something to put in there kind of mix it up inside or

actually do all that stuff first and then mix all that stuff together then

put it inside the pepper and then cook the

pepper for a little bit and you know I don't know kind of sounds good in my

head but we don't know then you know Chile over rice

you know rights with vegetables like green beans lima beans rice with carrots

and celery not celery broccoli I don't know

rice with celery that sounds gross I don't know but you guys got any ideas

for me you got any suggestions like what could I make this with you know what are

some cool things I could do with white rice because you

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Burden of victory What should happen to European ISIL prisoners? Syria News Al Jazeera - Duration: 6:04.

Burden of victory What should happen to European ISIL prisoners? Syria News Al Jazeera

Fate of more than 1,000 European ISIL prisoners, detained by Kurdish forces in northern Syria, hangs in the balance.

In a tiny sliver of land along the Euphrates River in northern , about 300 battle hardened ISIL fighters are making a last stand, with just a "few days" remaining for the groups total military defeat, according to US backed Kurdish forces battling the fighters.

But US President even while hailing an impending "100 percent victory" has issued a threat that, if executed, could help the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant , also known as ISIS group rise once again. 

In a flurry of tweets on Sunday,  that his European allies "take back over 800 ISIS fighters we captured in Syria and put them on trial". The alternative, he threatened, "is not a good one in that we will be forced to release them".

If Europe fails to deal with the issue, ISIL could "permeate" the continent, he said, calling on Britain, France and Germany to "do the job they are so capable of doing".

The slow rolling crisis over foreign ISIL prisoners in Syria took on a new urgency, analysts say, because of Trumps recent vow to . 

The announcement in December shocked US allies, prompting concern that an ill planned withdrawal could lead to an ISIL resurgence. It also alarmed the US allied Syrian Democratic Forces , the Kurdish led troops battling ISIL in northeastern Syria, as the move increases the possibility of an assault on their territory by Turkey, which considers the SDFs main YPG militia a terrorist organisation.

The SDF played a key role in the US led coalitions military offensive to drive ISIL out of cities and towns in eastern Syria, including Raqqa, the former capital of the groups self declared caliphate. In the process, the SDF captured thousands of ISIL fighters, them in makeshift prisons around Ayn Issa in the Raqqa district and holding their children and wives in detention camps.

"We currently have thousands of foreign ISIS fighters and their family members, and its a big logistical problem," said Kino Gabriel, spokesperson for the SDF.

"Its a big burden," he said, arguing that the self imposed Kurdish administration in the region does not have the capacity to "secure the prisons and prevent ISIL fighters from escaping" or provide services to the women and children in their custody.

More than 1,000 ISIL prisoners in SDF detention were from Europe, he said, a number that amounts to more than a sixth of the total number of Europeans who left the continent to join the armed group, according to from the US based think tank The Soufan Group.

The nearly 6,000 Europeans were among some 30,000 foreigners who arrived in the Middle East after ISIL declared its caliphate in Iraqs second largest city of Mosul in 2014.

At its peak, the group controlled an area equivalent to the size of the United Kingdom, but following a military offensive against it by a US led coalition in Syria and Iraq, ISIL lost nearly all of its territory and is now confined to the enclave around Baghouz village on the Euphrates.

The fighters and their families are stuck in limbo, unwanted by their home countries and unlikely to receive a trial by the SDF, an armed group that Gabriel said did not have "the authority or the capacity" to prosecute detainees or hold them long term.

While Gabriel did not comment on the number of detention centres holding ISIL fighters, the New York Times, quoting anonymous US and SDF officials, put the number at seven. Most of these temporary facilities, located around Ayn Issa, are former schools and old government buildings.

In addition to the makeshift prisons near Raqqa, there were at least four detainee facilities located near US army bases in the provinces of Deir Az Zor and Hasakah, according to Abdulnasser al Ayed, a Syrian journalist who reports on the issue.

The US and the SDF have long urged European allies to take back ISIL fighters, and Gabriel said talks with European countries have been "ongoing for more than two years".

But previous negotiations have without agreement, and only a handful of ISIL detainees mostly women and children have been to their countries of origin.

On Monday, Trumps demand on repatriation of fighters was by several countries in Europe, where returning ISIL members have carried out deadly assaults, including the 2015 attacks in Paris that killed more than 130 people, and the bombings in Brussels the next year that left 32 dead.   

A spokesperson for British Prime Minister Theresa May reiterated the UKs stance that foreign fighters must be brought to justice "in the region where the crimes had been committed". In France, which has taken the same stand as Britain, Justice Minister Nicole Belloubet told France 2 television that her government was "not changing our policy".

And Heiko Maas, Germanys foreign minister, told reporters in Brussels that organising repatriation of foreign fighters will "be extremely difficult" and said they can only "return if it is ensured they can immediately be taken into custody".

European governments would "prefer to delay the return [of ISIL recruits] or otherwise push the burden on others", said Robert Wesley, president of the Austria based Terrorism Research Initiative.

Outlining the factors for European reluctance, he said: "Firstly, public opinion is generally negative. Secondly, large numbers can quickly overwhelm judicial and security resources, especially if evidence of a committed crime is scarce or ambiguous, and there is a prospect of an early release into the public."

The SDF said it did not have the capacity or the resources to conduct interrogations and obtain information needed to ensure successful prosecution, with Gabriel, the SDF spokesperson, also saying that many of the fighters in their custody had lived and fought mainly in Iraq.

Insufficient evidence could result in many fighters walking free from European prisons within a few years, said Martin Reardon of the Soufan Group. European countries faced a "real dilemma", he said, noting: "You cant say just because they were there and captured, they were a fighter."

For a case against an ISIL returnee to stand in a European court, "You need witnesses or the persons own testimony in court, or some sort of evidence to support that case," he said. "If not, you have no recourse but to let them go … and if radicalised terrorists are set free and go on to stage attacks, the cost will be devastating."

The likelihood of rehabilitating someone who was "involved in combat and killing is very slim", Reardon said, adding conducting surveillance on freed ISIL detainees would be impossible because of the high cost involved.

Despite European reluctance to take back ISIL detainees, keeping them in SDF prisons and camps is not a long term solution, said analysts. ISIL could attack such facilities to free detainees, especially in the confusion of a US withdrawal or a Turkish assault on the region.

"ISIS has a tradition of brazen and unexpected attacks on critical facilities, including prisons. Even if the US maintains a presence in northern Syria and supports the protection of prison facilities, such concentrations of fighters would continue to present a tempting target," said Wesley of the Terrorism Research Initiative.

Ayed, the Syrian journalist, agreed. Predicting an attack "very soon", he said: "They [ISIL] will want to free prisoners, especially with active cells in and around the area and with the US troop withdrawal looming."

If the Europeans refused to take back the ISIL detainees, the SDF could hand them over to the Syrian government, which the group reportedly is in discussion with.

But in such a scenario, the Syrian government could "expose detainees to the most severe torture to obtain information," said Nawaf Khalil, director of the Germany based Centre for Kurdish Studies. Others said the government was also likely to execute ISIL fighters, even though the European Union opposes the death penalty.

Khalil said the only remaining option was to set up an international court to consider each detainees case with the aim of repatriating them after a trial.

Gabriel, the SDF spokesperson, said talks with the coalition and the US army to set up such a system were under way.

"This court can take responsibility for the interrogation of those terrorists and to take all the information needed from their countries to be able to prosecute them … and then give them the sentences that they need or deserve for the crimes that they have committed."

For now, despite Trumps threat, the SDF does not plan to release its ISIL prisoners. 

"We know the terrifying things and the crimes they ave committed against the people of Syria and Iraq," Gabriel said. "It is in our best interest not to let them go because we faced the horrors that theyre capable of – and we dont want it to happen to any other human being."

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