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Tunisia to try son of Istanbul attack victim over joining Daesh

By AFP - Jul 02,2016 - Last updated at Jul 02,2016

Family, friends and officers carry the Tunisian flag-draped coffin of the head of the paediatric service at the Tunis military hospital, Col. Fathi Bayoudh, one of the victims killed on Tuesday at the blasts in Istanbul’s Ataturk Airport, during his funeral in Ksour Essaf, southern Tunisia, on Friday (AP photo)

TUNIS — A Tunisian was flown home for trial on Saturday after his arrest in Turkey for allegedly joining the Daesh terror group, prosecutors said, days after his father was killed in an airport attack while searching for him. 

“Anouar Bayoudh arrived in Tunis at 00:30 am (2330 GMT Friday) with his girlfriend. They were taken to the investigation unit for terrorist crimes at the National Guard,” prosecution spokesman Sofiene Sliti said.

Bayoudh was to appear before a magistrate later on Saturday and both he and his girlfriend were to be charged with “joining a terrorist organisation and involvement in terrorist crimes”, Sliti said.

The 26-year-old has no idea that his father Fathi was buried on Friday after he was among the 44 people killed in a gun and bomb attack at Istanbul’s Ataturk airport earlier this week, the spokesman added.

The military doctor had been in Turkey looking for Anouar, after he and his wife learned late last year that their son had joined Daesh in Iraq and then in Syria, like thousands of other young Tunisians.

But Anouar had a change of heart after he realised the militants were “monsters”, his mother has told AFP.

The young man turned himself into the rebel Free Syrian Army after realising that he no longer wanted to be part of Daesh, and was detained in Turkey. 

His father was waiting for his wife at the Istanbul airport on Tuesday when the attackers struck, after months of back-and-forth to Turkey to try to find his son.

There has been no claim of responsibility for the attack, but authorities say evidence points to Dasesh.

 

Tunisia has also been the victim of attacks claimed by Dasesh, and it is thought that thousands of Tunisians have travelled to neighbouring Libya, Iraq or Syria to join Daesh or its terrorist rival Al Qaeda.

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