German journalist detained in Syria back home, lawyer says
Eva Maria Michelmann vanished in Syria in January as government forces advanced on Kurdish fighters in the northeast. The German government last week said it
Eva Maria Michelmann vanished in Syria in January as government forces advanced on Kurdish fighters in the northeast. The German government last week said it was working to get her home. German journalist Eva Maria Michelmann, who went missing early this year in Syria while reporting on the remnants of more than a decade of civil war, returned to Germany on Friday, her lawyer said. "It can be confirmed that Eva M. Michelmann was released this morning and returned to Germany this afternoon," her lawyer Roland Meister told the AFP news agency, also making similar comments to other outlets. What else do we know about Michelmann's return? Her brother Antonius Michelmann later told the German dpa news agency that "We went to collect her," as she returned to Germany via Jordan.
He said that she was doing well, given the circumstances. He said she had been held in solitary confinement for an extended period but did not provide further details. Kurds in northeastern Syria fear end of autonomy To view this video please enable JavaScript, and consider upgrading to a web browser that supports HTML5 video What had happened to Michelmann? Michelmann had gone missing during an offensive by Syrian government forces against Kurdish fighters in the northeast in January this year. Her colleague Turkish-Kurdish journalist Ahmed Polad disappeared at the same time. Michelmann and Polad were covering developments in the northeast, amid considerable tension between Kurdish fighters and the relatively new Syrian government Image: Maria Castro/ZUMA/IMAGO According to the Committee to Protect Journalists (CPJ), they both worked for the Istanbul-based socialist Etkin News Agency (ETHA) and the Ozgur TV channel.
For months it was not entirely clear what had become of them. The German Foreign Ministry last week said it was working at a high level to secure Michelmann's release. It wasn't clear why the reporter from the western city of Cologne was detained or if she was charged with any crime. The West has broadly welcomed the new Syrian government, led by former Islamist militant group leader Ahmed al-Sharaa, who has pledged to turn over a new, inclusive leaf now he's in power in Damascus. But religious and ethnic minorities including the Kurds in Syria have voiced concern about the new Sunni regime that toppled longstanding dictator Bashar Assad in December 2024.
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