ICRC urges countries to reclaim citizens from Syria camps

Peter Maurer
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Updated 27 March 2021
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ICRC urges countries to reclaim citizens from Syria camps

  • UN rights experts, in an appeal last month, urged 57 states to repatriate nearly 10,000 of their citizens held in the camps in “sub-human” conditions without legal process

GENEVA: Countries must reclaim 62,000 people, two-thirds of them children, held in squalid camps in northeast Syria for families associated with Daesh extremists, the International Committee of the Red Cross said on Friday, describing the situation as a “tragedy in plain sight.”
Those held in the Al-Hol displacement camp run by Syrian Kurdish forces come from some 60 countries. They fled Daesh’s final enclaves, and the majority of them are Iraqi or Syrian.
“The tens and thousands of children stranded in Al Hol, other camps and detained in prisons are victims. They are victims no matter what they or their parents might have done or stand accused of,” ICRC President Peter Maurer said in a statement after visiting the sprawling site where it runs a field hospital and provides food and water.
Children, many orphaned or separated from their parents, are growing up in often dangerous conditions in the camp, he said.
In January, the UN said it had received reports of 12 Syrian and Iraqi nationals being murdered there.
Maurer urged authorities to end a “tragedy in plain sight,” adding: “Positive examples of repatriation and reintegration do exist.”

BACKGROUND

• People held in the Al-Hol displacement camp run by Syrian Kurdish forces come from some 60 countries.

• They fled Daesh’s final enclaves, and the majority of them are Iraqi or Syrian.

Some states have balked at reclaiming their citizens, invoking security concerns, or tried to strip them of their nationality.
Maurer ended a five-day visit to Syria that also included stops in Hassakeh, Daraya outside Damascus, and ministerial-level talks in the capital as the country marks 10 years of war.
President Bashar Assad, with the help of Russian and Iranian forces, has all but crushed the insurgency.
UN rights experts, in an appeal last month, urged 57 states to repatriate nearly 10,000 of their citizens held in the camps in “sub-human” conditions without legal process.
Under international law, states have a duty to repatriate their citizens and, if there is evidence, to prosecute adults for war crimes or other offenses at fair trials in their domestic courts, they said.


Indonesia’s first woman president awarded honorary doctorate by Princess Nourah University

Updated 10 February 2026
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Indonesia’s first woman president awarded honorary doctorate by Princess Nourah University

  • Megawati was recognized for her leadership and contributions to social, legal affairs
  • She has received 10 other honorary degrees from Indonesian and foreign institutions

JAKARTA: Megawati Sukarnoputri, who served as Indonesia’s fifth president and was the country’s only female head of state to date, has been awarded an honorary doctorate by Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University in Riyadh, becoming the first foreign national to receive the title.

Megawati, the eldest daughter of Indonesia’s first President Sukarno and chairwoman of the country’s largest political party, the PDIP, served as president from 2001 to 2004.

The 79-year-old was awarded an honorary doctorate in organizational and legal affairs in Riyadh on Monday during a ceremony overseen by Princess Nourah University’s acting president, Dr. Fawzia bint Sulaiman Al-Amro.

“This recognition was given in appreciation of her efforts during her presidency, her significant contributions to social, organizational, and legal fields, and her role in strengthening institutional leadership in Indonesia,” the university said in a statement.

This is Megawati’s 11th honorary doctorate. She has received similar degrees from Indonesian and foreign universities, including the Moscow State Institute of International Relations in 2003 and the Soka University of Japan in 2020.

She has also been awarded the title of honorary professor by several institutions, including by the Seoul Institute of the Arts in 2022.

“We gather at the Princess Nourah bint Abdulrahman University, a university that stands as a symbol of women’s progress in education, knowledge and public service … To see so many intelligent women, I feel very proud,” Megawati said in her acceptance speech.

“Women’s empowerment is not a threat to any values, culture or tradition. It is actually a condition for nations that believe in their future … A great nation is one that is able to harness all of its human potential. A strong nation is one that does not allow half of its social power to be left on the sidelines of history.”

Megawati is the longest-serving political leader in Indonesia. Indonesia’s first direct presidential elections took place during her presidency, consolidating the country’s transition to democracy after the downfall of its longtime dictator Suharto in 1998.