French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims
A niece of a notorious militant propagandists on trial for joining the Daesh group and taking her children with her apologised to all victims of the jihadists as well as her family. (Reuters/File)
Short Url
Updated 8 sec ago

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims

French niece of militant propagandists offers ‘apologies’ to victims
  • Speaking in court on Friday, Jennyfer Clain, a niece of Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain offered her “apologies” to all “direct and indirect victims” of the militants
  • “I am not asking them to forgive me, it is unforgivable, but I offer them my deepest and most sincere apologies,” she said

PARIS: A niece of a notorious militant propagandists on trial for joining the Daesh group and taking her children with her apologized to all victims of the militants as well as her family.
Speaking in court on Friday, Jennyfer Clain, a niece of Jean-Michel and Fabien Clain, who publicly claimed responsibility on behalf of Daesh for the Paris attacks on November 13, 2015, offered her “apologies” to all “direct and indirect victims” of the militants, “in France, Syria, Iraq and elsewhere.”
During the worst attack on Paris since World War II, militant gunmen and suicide bombers killed 130 people at the Bataclan concert hall and elsewhere.
The Clain brothers are presumed to have died during the military campaign launched by US-backed Kurdish groups to defeat IS. In 2022, they were sentenced in absentia to life imprisonment without parole.
“I am not asking them to forgive me, it is unforgivable, but I offer them my deepest and most sincere apologies,” she said, referring to the victims.
Jennyfer Clain and two other French women went on trial in Paris last week, accused of traveling to the Middle East to join the Daesh group.
Jennyfer Clain went to the Middle East with four children, and her fifth baby was born in Raqqa, the Daesh group’s one time capital.
The two other women on trial are Jennyfer Clain’s sister-in-law, Mayalen Duhart, 42, and 67-year-old Christine Allain, the women’s mother-in-law.
Duhart brought her four children with her, and had a baby there, who died at seven months.
Weeping in court, Jennyfer Clain asked her five children, who have been placed in foster care since their return to France in 2019, for “forgiveness.”
“I am sorry for everything they have been through because of me,” she said. “I have failed in my role as a mother,” said the 34-year-old, who is also on trial for abandoning minors.
A representative of the National Anti-Terrorism Prosecutor’s Office has requested a 13-year prison sentence for her.
Duhart also sobbed in court.
Released on parole, she said that a return to prison would be a “disaster” for her children, who have also been placed in foster care.
Prosecutors requested a 10-year prison sentence for Duhart.
“I am not a victim,” she said. “The victims are the others, those who were tortured and massacred by the organization I belonged to. I am responsible.”
Earlier this week the presiding judge had pointed out to the three women that they had not said anything about “the victims of the attacks.”
Allain said that she had been “touched” by her meeting in prison with Georges Salines, the father of Lola Salines, one of the victims killed at the Bataclan.
Prosecutors have requested a 15-year prison sentence for her.
The verdict is expected later Friday.


Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says

Updated 24 sec ago

Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says

Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, Polish PM says
“European allies have never been so united... we need to be vigilant,” Tusk said

WARSAW: Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world and Europe is finally more united in its views on the threat from Moscow, Polish Prime Minister Donald Tusk said on Friday.
“European allies have never been so united... we need to be vigilant. Russia has ill intentions toward the whole world, and those who border with it are the first to feel it,” Tusk told reporters when asked about recent drone incidents.

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US
Updated 1 min 59 sec ago

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US

Germany’s Merz says Europe still far too dependent on software from US
  • Merz said rules are no longer being observed in the United States

BERLIN: Germany still depends far too much on software from the United States, Chancellor Friedrich Merz said on Friday, calling for Europe to focus more on digital sovereignty and its own data centers.
“I want us in Europe, not just us in Germany, but we in Europe as a whole, to become more independent, more sovereign, and to develop some of our strengths ourselves,” he told an audience at a summit in Berlin.
He said rules are no longer being observed in the United States, which has fundamentally transformed over the last few years so that changes will not revert after the next election.


Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training

Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training
Updated 34 min 17 sec ago

Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training

Bangladesh, Oman to boost cooperation in diplomatic training
  • New agreement offers master degree-equivalent program for foreign service officials
  • Dhaka, Muscat agree to strengthen bilateral cooperation during FMs meeting in New York

DHAKA: Bangladesh and Oman have signed an agreement to increase diplomatic cooperation following a meeting between their foreign ministers on the sidelines of the UN General Assembly in New York this week, the Bangladeshi foreign ministry said on Friday.

Bangladesh’s Foreign Affairs Adviser Touhid Hossain and Omani Foreign Minister Sayyid Badr Al-Busaidi signed a memorandum of understanding on diplomatic studies and training, which is expected to boost collaboration in capacity-building, training and exchange of expertise.

“Under this MoU, foreign service officials from both countries will get opportunities for academic training and education. This will offer a master degree-equivalent program for foreign service officials,” Mostofa Jamil Khan, West Asia director at the Bangladeshi Ministry of Foreign Affairs, told Arab News.

“Oman (places great importance) on career diplomats for maintaining international relations. They are (more highly) trained … It will be a good thing for our foreign service officials. We hope that, in the coming days, this agreement will also expand for other civil service officials.”

During their meeting in New York, Hossain and his counterpart also “reaffirmed their commitment to further deepen bilateral cooperation in areas of mutual interest,” according to the Bangladeshi foreign ministry.

Around 700,000 Bangladeshis live and work in Oman — one of the largest populations of Bangladeshi migrant workers abroad.

Bangladesh is optimistic about the new area of cooperation, which Khan said has the potential to further expand in the future.

“We hope that, in the first batch, we will be able to send 20 to 25 students to Oman. This is just the beginning, and there are opportunities to increase,” he said.

“In the long run, it will help our foreign service officials to have a better understanding (of) Oman, which will eventually boost the bilateral relationship.”


UN rights chief warns South Sudan on brink of new war

UN rights chief warns South Sudan on brink of new war
Updated 46 min 51 sec ago

UN rights chief warns South Sudan on brink of new war

UN rights chief warns South Sudan on brink of new war
  • “This is unconscionable and must stop,” said Turk in a statement
  • “I deeply worry for the plight of civilians in South Sudan“

GENEVA: The United Nations rights chief warned Friday that South Sudan is on the brink of renewed war, as nearly 2,000 civilians have been killed in a surge of violence this year.
The UN documented 1,854 killings, 1,693 injuries, 423 abductions and 169 cases of sexual violence from January to September — a 59-percent jump from last year, adding that limited access means the real toll is likely higher.
“This is unconscionable and must stop,” said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Volker Turk in a statement.
He said fears were “intensifying” that a 2018 peace deal, which ended a brutal five-year civil war in South Sudan, was about to collapse and send the country back to “all-out fighting.”
“I deeply worry for the plight of civilians in South Sudan,” Turk said, calling on the country’s leaders and international community “to do everything in their power to pull South Sudan from the brink.”
Fighting has escalated sharply since March, with the army carrying out “indiscriminate” airstrikes in populated areas of Upper Nile, Jonglei, Unity, Central Equatoria and Warrap states, the statement said.
Homes, schools and clinics have been destroyed, displacing thousands, it added.
Communal bloodshed has also spiked, with inter-clan and ethnic clashes in Warrap and Jonglei states driving a 33-percent rise in civilian deaths. The UN reported at least 45 extrajudicial killings by security forces this year.
Turk also pressed Juba to ensure due process in the trial of suspended First Vice President Riek Machar, who faces charges including treason and crimes against humanity over a March attack on a military base.


UN adds 68 companies to blacklist for alleged complicity in rights violations in Israeli settlements

UN adds 68 companies to blacklist for alleged complicity in rights violations in Israeli settlements
Updated 26 September 2025

UN adds 68 companies to blacklist for alleged complicity in rights violations in Israeli settlements

UN adds 68 companies to blacklist for alleged complicity in rights violations in Israeli settlements
  • New list spotlights companies that do business deemed supportive of the settlements, which are considered by many to be illegal under international law

GENEVA: The United Nations has added nearly 70 more companies to a blacklist of companies from 11 countries that it says are complicit in violating Palestinian human rights through their business ties to Israeli settlements in the occupied West Bank.
The new list spotlights companies that do business that’s deemed supportive of the settlements, which are considered by many to be illegal under international law. It includes an array of companies like vendors of construction materials and earth-movers, as well as providers of security, travel and financial services.
The list, formally known as a “database of companies,” now contains 158 companies — the vast majority Israeli. The others are from the United States, Canada, China, Britain, France, Germany, Spain, Portugal, the Netherlands and Luxembourg.
Newcomers to the list include German building-materials company Heidelberg Materials, Portuguese rail systems provider Steconfer, and Spanish transportation engineering firm Ineco. Among those still on the list are travel-sector companies US-based Expedia Group, Booking Holdings Inc. and Airbnb, Inc.
While 68 new companies were added Friday, seven were taken off. A total of 215 business enterprises were assessed in this round, but hundreds more could get a look in the future.
The UN’s main human rights body passed a resolution nearly a decade ago to create the list, and Israel has sharply criticized it since. The revision could further isolate Israel at a time when some of its European allies have recognized an independent Palestinian state over Israel’s conduct of its war against Hamas in Gaza.