Talk:Trials of Daesh suspects

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References

  1. Mohammed Rwanduzy (2019-08-27). "ISIS wives, children in Iraqi IDP camps ‘ticking time bomb’: security official". Rudaw. https://www.rudaw.net/english/middleeast/iraq/270820192. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "There are more than 45,000 children born under ISIS rule in Iraqi IDP camps, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council." 
  2. Josie Ensor (2019-10-10). "Inside al-Hol, the 'toxic' Isil prison camp where radicalised women have taken control". The Telegraph. https://www.telegraph.co.uk/news/2019/10/10/inside-al-hol-timebomb-isil-prison-camp-threatening-crack-open/. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "Hol, a sprawling settlement holding some 68,000 Isil wives and their children and run by the UK’s Kurdish allies, has variously been described as a “ticking timebomb”, a “mini caliphate”, and “Camp Bucca II” after the notorious US-run detention centre in Iraq which spawned Baghdadi and his cohort." 
  3. Anne Speckhard (2019-10-18). "Imprisoned ISIS Wives and Children Have Nowhere to Run To, Nowhere to Hide". Daily Beast. https://www.thedailybeast.com/imprisoned-isis-wives-and-children-caught-between-bashar-assad-turkish-onslaught-as-kurdish-guards-pull-out-1. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "The female inmates of Camp Ain Issa, farther west, faced a similar dilemma earlier in the week when the Turks began shelling. Until Sunday, Ain Issa Camp housed a total of 12,000 women and children, but according to one Belgian woman, it descended into “complete chaos” as fires broke out, the guards left, and the women escaped in the hundreds." 
  4. India Rakusen; Martin Chulov; Polly Toynbee (2019-02-19). "Send me home: what should happen to the Isis wives?". The Guardian. https://www.theguardian.com/news/audio/2019/feb/19/send-me-home-what-should-happen-to-the-isis-wives-podcast. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "Last month, Hoda Muthana and her one-year-old son were captured by Kurdish forces after fleeing the last pocket of land controlled by Islamic State. American-born Muthana travelled to Syria to join the terror group in 2014, and was at one time one of Isis’s most prominent online agitators. Muthana has said she now deeply regrets the decision to go and wants to return to America." 
  5. Paul Workman (2019-03-01). "Canadians among hundreds of ISIS brides who want to return home". CTV News. https://www.ctvnews.ca/w5/canadians-among-hundreds-of-isis-brides-who-want-to-return-home-1.4313512. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "At one point Canada was preparing to let these women return, but that stopped abruptly several months ago, according to Kurdish officials. Now they languish in the misery of the Al-Hawl camp, which is becoming more crowded, chaotic and unsafe." 
  6. Nurcan Baysal (2019-03-18). "ISIS wives must be held accountable for Yazidi massacre". Ahval News. https://ahvalnews.com/isis/isis-wives-must-be-held-accountable-yazidi-massacre. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "Sometimes, she said, these wives helped ISIS members rape the Yazidi women, sometimes they tortured Yazidi women. Ilwin drew a plan of the house in Mosul where her sisters were forcibly kept, asking for my help. I gave it to the Kurdistan Regional Authority Human Rights Centre." 
  7. "ISIS wives are met with skepticism in the West". Deutche Welle. https://www.dw.com/en/isis-wives-are-met-with-skepticism-in-the-west/av-48235187. Retrieved 2019-10-24. 
  8. Nishita Jha (2019-02-22). "The Whole World Is Debating Whether “ISIS Brides” Should Go Home. But Yazidi Women Want Them Brought To Justice.". Buzz Feed News (New Delhi). https://www.buzzfeednews.com/article/nishitajha/isis-yazidi-shamima-begum-hoda-muthana. Retrieved 2019-10-24. "Pari Ibrahim, the executive director of the Free Yezidi Foundation, a group that was formed to support the vulnerable Yazidi community and create awareness about their political situation, told BuzzFeed News that she rejected the narrative that women who married ISIS soldiers — so-called “ISIS brides” — were innocent bystanders." 
  9. Heather Murdock; Brian Williamson. "Wedded to ISIS". Voice of America News. https://projects.voanews.com/wedded-to-isis/. Retrieved 2019-10-24.