Dealing with European foreign fighters in Syria: governance challenges

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Series Details December 2013
Publication Date December 2013
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The number of European foreign fighters with a jihadist political agenda participating in the Syrian civil war has increased exponentially over the past months and has become an ever-growing concern for European policymakers.

Returned radicals: It is particularly the possibility that returned foreign fighters have radicalized that makes them a potential threat – if only to themselves and their direct surroundings.

Challenges and strategies: In this ICCT Research Paper, Edwin Bakker, Christophe Paulussen and Eva Entenmann examine some of the challenges, as well as possible strategies and legal mechanisms available for European policymakers to address the foreign fighters phenomenon.

It first assesses the complex threat (potentially) posed by returning mujahidin to Europe’s security.

The Paper then outlines some of the risk assessment and governance challenges that European policymakers, governments and legal practitioners face in relation to (potential) foreign jihadi fighters and returnees.

Prosecution: Prosecution via international crimes will be analysed before turning to specific national practices. Here, the Paper focuses on a few European states that have a considerable number of departing foreign fighters as estimated by their own intelligence services: Austria, Belgium, France, Germany, Italy, Spain, the Netherlands and the UK.

The Paper concludes with a series of recommendations.

Source Link http://www.clingendael.nl/sites/default/files/Dealing-with-European-foreign-fighters-in-Syria.pdf
Related Links
ESO Background Information: Europe at risk of 'huge number' of returning jihadist fighters http://www.europeansources.info/record/europe-at-risk-of-huge-number-of-returning-jihadist-fighters/

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