1. Skip to content
  2. Skip to main menu
  3. Skip to more DW sites

Turkey detains nine Brits trying to enter Syria

April 1, 2015

Turkey's army says it detained the nine Britons, who were trying to cross into Syria illegally. Turkish territory is increasingly being used by would-be Western jihadists wishing to fight in Syria.

https://p.dw.com/p/1F1aY
Turkish soldiers and an army tank take position at the new site of the Suleyman Shah tomb near the northern Syrian village of Esme, on the Syrian-Turkish border February 24, 2015 (Photo: REUTERS/Stringer)
Image: Reuters

The British citizens were arrested in Turkey's Hatay province near the Syrian border on Wednesday. It is not clear why these people - whose identities have not been disclosed by Turkish authorities - were trying to get into Syria.

Some sources claim the group consists of three men, two women and four children.

"Nine people of British nationality were arrested on the border, trying to enter Syria from Turkey," the army wrote in a statement on its website.

'Islamic State' recruits

Western nationals wishing to join the Middle Eastern jihadist groups in Syria and Iraq have frequently taken routes through Turkey into the war-torn countries. Thousands of foreigners have joined the ranks of militant group "Islamic State" (IS).

Last month, three British girls were arrested by Turkish officials. They had traveled from the UK to Turkey in February, and the security forces believed they had crossed into Syria.

A group of nine British medical students of Sudanese origin went missing in March after travelling to Turkey with an apparent aim of entering Syria.

Ankara has accused its Western allies of not taking adequate measures to stop the flow of would-be European jihadists to its country.

In turn, the European Union has criticized Turkey for not properly monitoring its southeastern borders.

shs/gsw (AP, dpa, Reuters, AFP)