Overview
- The state security case at the Higher Regional Court in Frankfurt centers on the charge of membership in a foreign terrorist organization.
- Prosecutors say she married under Islamic law in April 2015 and that she and her husband received monthly IS payments of about $100 to $170.
- Her children, born in 2016 and 2018, were allegedly raised under IS doctrine, with one son reportedly nearly starving during the civil war.
- She was captured by Kurdish YPG units in March 2019, held in the al-Hawl and Roj camps until 2022, and was then repatriated to Germany and taken into custody.
- The indictment includes claims she disciplined fellow inmates and pushed others toward radical Islam, which she denies as the presiding judge emphasized the seriousness of the case and hearings were set through mid-October.