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IMAGE SOURCE,GETTY IMAGES Image caption, More than half of the roughly 42,000 foreign nationals held in Islamic State camps across the country are children, according to non-governmental organisation Human Rights Watch
Canada is repatriating a group of women and children who have been held at least three years in Islamic State camps in Syria, their lawyer says.
The federal government agreed in January to bring back six women and their 13 children, but pushed back on repatriating four imprisoned men.
Lawyer Lawrence Greenspon said on Wednesday the women and children were “en route” to Canada.
Ottawa has yet to confirm they are in transit.
He declined to comment on when or where they would arrive in Canada.
Canada offered to repatriate her children without her, as officials are still conducting a security and risk assessment for the mother, said Mr Greenspon, who represents the family.
He said Canada’s department of foreign affairs, Global Affairs, told the mother last week that she could either send her children home without her or keep them in the camp with her.
“Her choice was that she wants the children to be repatriated and her to be with them at the same time,” he said.
The BBC has reached out to Global Affairs for comment.
Asked by reporters on Wednesday whether Canada was breaking government policy by asking a mother to send her children back to Canada without her, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau said Canada was “engaged with all of our responsibilities”.
He declined to comment any further.
The repatriation could be the biggest so far for Canada after the so-called Islamic State caliphate was destroyed in 2019.
Last October, the RCMP, Canada’s federal police force, arrested a 27-year-old Canadian woman returning from Syria and charged her with terrorism-related offences. Another woman, who returned to Canada after marrying an Islamic State fighter, was also arrested and released on bail while officials seek a peace bond in her case.
It is unclear if any of the women being returned this week may face charges. The BBC has reached out to the RCMP for comment.
A federal court has also ordered the Canadian government to repatriate four men who have not been formally charged with crimes but are imprisoned in camps in Syria. British-Canadian dual national, Jack Letts, whose British citizenship was revoked, is one of the four.
Human rights campaigners have pushed the government to repatriate its citizens.
Over the past four years, only a handful of women and children have been brought back to Canada.
More than 42,000 foreign nationals, most of whom are children, are being held in dangerous conditions in Islamic State camps across Syria, according to non-governmental organisation Human Rights Watch.