BAGHDAD — Inside a heavily guarded detention facility in Baghdad, men from scores of different countries and nationalities were brought one after another into interrogation rooms and questioned by Iraqi officers.
The prisoners are suspected members of the militant Islamic State group recently transferred from Syria to Iraq at the request of Baghdad — a move welcomed by the U.S.-led coalition that had for years fought against IS.
Over a period of several weeks, the U.S. military escorted more than 5,000 IS detainees from 60 different nationalities from prisons in northeastern Syria run by the U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, to Baghdad.
The transfers have helped calm fears that the fighting in Syria would allow the IS prisoners to flee from detention camps there and join militant sleeper cells that even to this day are able to stage attacks in both Iraq and Syria.
On Thursday, The Associated Press was given rare access to the sprawling detention facility in western Baghdad — now known as Al-Karkh Central Prison but more widely known as Camp Cooper after the 2003 U.S.-led invasion that ousted Saddam Hussein — where the men are being interrogated.
Laying the groundwork for trials
Iraq is looking to put on trial some of the thousands of the IS detainees who were held for years in Syria without charges or access to the judicial system.
Iraqi Judge Ali Hussein Jafat, who is heading the committee interrogating IS detainees brought from Syria, says it's not easy because of the sheer numbers of prisoners involved.