Rambally preparing to go to Syria on fact-finding mission

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Rambally preparing to go to Syria on fact-finding mission

Chaguanas West MP Dinesh Rambally is headed to Syria.

The opposition MP and human rights lawyers, said he intends to engage in a fact-finding mission in light of talks to repatriate nationals held in Syria and Iraq.

He told GML that he also made the decision because over 30 of his constituents have relatives who are detained in camps in Syria, Iraq and Turkey, after they left T&T to join the Islamic State (ISIS) years ago.
According to Human Rights Watch, there are over 105 Trini nationals in northeast Syria and this includes 56 children.

Rambally said he views the entire scenario as one of an international human rights issue,

He said: “I have given my commitment as a Member of Parliament, as a human rights attorney, as a public law lawyer, that I will engage and I have given a commitment to my constituents that I am engaging from the point of view of, I don’t want to use the word spearhead, but work is already in progress and I will be going to Syria. Most likely, if all things go according to plan, it will be during the month of June and going to Syria for the purpose of engaging in a cross-border identification verification exercise.”

Rambally added, “I am of the view that this is a scenario where we must rise to the occasion, and we must engage in a meaningful manner, in some kind of progressive manner, to ensure that we can bring these children home. These children, at the end of the day, are victims. According to law, we deem them to be victims of trafficking, whether we deem them to be victims of deceit, or whatever you may wish to call it as a matter of law. They are, at the end of the day, victims, innocent children who would have gone across on the will and instruction and directive of their parents. Mostly, in some of these families, it would have been the male fathers in the family.”

He also called out the Government and the Nightingale Committee it set up to deal with the repatriation matter.

“The Government needs to come forward. We keep hearing about the 2018 Nightingale Committee. There are public documents where they indicated in 2020 that they were at a very advanced stage in their work preparation, namely that they had already developed a policy and associated legislation which would then be taken to Parliament, so that Parliament would now use its collective wisdom to see what is in the best interest of the nation and how we move forward,” he said.

“I am saying that if that is, in fact, true, we need to fast-track that work and see how we can start implementing it by way of discussion in the public domain, whilst all these other exercises take place. Just like Canada, where today we have seen the repatriation of 19 of its citizens, I think that there were actually court orders. There were court proceedings and court orders which mandated the Canadian government to bring these persons back.”

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