According to the daily newspaper Politiken, another of the women will be produced before a judge in the Court in Kolding, while the last, according to information to Ritzau, is expected to be produced before a judge in the Court in Frederiksberg on Thursday afternoon.
According to DR Nyheder, all three were remanded in custody in absentia this summer, in other words – without them being present.
Apparently, all three are charged with violating provisions of the Criminal Code section on terrorism.
One relevant provision is affiliation with terrorist organizations, and another is about staying in certain areas. However, it is not clear in advance exactly which paragraphs the women are targeting.
When a person has been remanded in custody in absentia, he or she must be brought before a judge within 24 hours of setting foot on Danish soil.
Here, the person can answer questions, and a judge must then decide whether there are grounds for remand in custody.
The price of joining a terrorist organization is imprisonment for several years. For example, as recently as August, a woman was sentenced to five years in prison for staying with Islamic State. The stay lasted for two years and nine months. The 23-year-old woman has chosen not to appeal the verdict handed down by the Court in Glostrup.
Just staying in a conflict zone in Syria without the permission of the authorities also provides unconditional imprisonment. And that completely regardless of the reason for the stay.
A case from Aarhus has shown this. A former soldier, Tommy Mørck, decided to join the Kurdish forces, where he was fighting against Islamic State. Still, the man has been sentenced to unconditional imprisonment for six months.
Source: The Nordic Page