Denmark to strip suspected ISIS fighters of consular assistance

Denmark is planning on withholding consular
assistance to its citizens who travelled abroad to fight for extremist groups,
Foreign Minister Jeppe Kofod announced on Saturday.
Kofod's Twitter announcement comes just days after
Turkey began deporting foreign fighters — including EU nationals — with
so-called Islamist State who had been detained by Kurdish authorities in
northern Syria.
We owe absolutely nothing to foreign fighters who
went to Syria and Iraq to fight for ISIS," Kofod wrote on Twitter.
"This is why we are now taking measures against
the access of foreign fighters to consular assistance by the foreign ministry
and Danish representations abroad," he added.
Consular assistance typically includes visitation
contact with incarcerated nationals.
The measure needs to be approved by parliament. Last
month the government also revealed plans to strip dual nationals of their
citizenship if they've travelled abroad to fight with militant groups.
A report from the nonprofit Soufan Center estimated
that some 40,000 foreign fighters from 110 countries joined IS's ranks between
2014 and 2017, including 5,000 EU nationals.
With more than 1,900 citizens gone abroad to fight
for IS, France was the most heavily burdened EU country. Denmark, meanwhile,
had had 145 of its nationals join the Islamist terror group.
Before the Turkish military incursion in northern
Syria, launched on October 9, Western-backed Kurdish groups were detaining
thousands of suspected IS fighters and their family members including wives and
children in makeshifts prison and camps.
According to the European Council of Foreign Affairs
thinktank, at least 2,000 of the men in detention were foreign as well as
11,000 for women and children.
Ankara, which sees Kurdish organisations as terror
groups, has since secured control of the area and the camps and began, earlier
this week, deporting foreign fighters.