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EU aims to disrupt networks of jihadis going to Middle East

BRUSSELS (AP) - The European Union is launching a program with countries in North Africa, the Middle East and the Balkans to disrupt the networks of jihadis heading to Syria and Iraq.

EU foreign ministers said Monday they are drawing up action plans with Morocco, Tunisia, Algeria, Egypt, Lebanon and Western Balkan states "to dissuade and disrupt foreign terrorist fighters' travel as well as to manage their return."

More than 3,000 Europeans are known to have traveled to Syria and Iraq to operate as foreign fighters for Islamic extremists.

Belgian Foreign Minister Didier Reynders, meanwhile, called for the long-delayed introduction of a European system for exchanging air passenger travel information.

Otherwise "we will not have the means that we need to follow foreign fighters more closely as they travel abroad," he said.

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