QAMISHLI: Repatriations of foreign woman and children affiliated to Daesh from detention camps in northeast Syria hit a record high in 2022, Kurdish authorities said on Tuesday.
Thousands of foreigners including women and children had gone to Syria to live in Daesh’s so-called “caliphate” until 2019, when US-backed Kurdish forces snatched the last pocket of Syrian territory from the jihadists.
Fleeing women and children were housed in overcrowded detention camps run by Kurdish authorities and international NGOs, who had pushed for repatriatiations due to rising violence and dire conditions in the camps.
Governments responded slowly, fearing security threats and a public backlash over the return of individuals radicalized by Daesh.
But the pace picked up his year, with 517 women and children repatriated so far, according to Kurdish authorities’ statistics.
They included more than 100 from France and over 50 from Germany. More than 150 were returned to Tajikistan, the first for that country.
Returns numbered 324 in 2021, 281 in 2020 and 342 in 2019.
More than 10,000 foreign women and children remain in the Al-Hol and Roj camps, Badran Jia Kurd, a senior official in the autonomous administration, told Reuters.
Letta Tayler, Human Rights Watch’s counter-terrorism lead, said the rise could be due in part to criticism by the United Nations and the European Court of Human Rights of European countries’ failure to repatriate their nationals.
Also, states had found they had the legal farmework to prosecute and jail those who had traveled to Daesh-held territory, making those governments more willing to bring them home, Tayler added.
But she said 2022’s figures “are still drops in the bucket.”
“This humanitarian and security crisis will only get worse if countries keep outsourcing management of their detained nationals to a non-state force inside one of the world’s most complex war zones,” Tayler said.
Record number of foreigners repatriated from Daesh camps in Syria this year
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Record number of foreigners repatriated from Daesh camps in Syria this year
Syrian government announces ceasefire in Aleppo
- Syrian government forces have been fighting the Kurdish-led SDF force in Aleppo, where at least 21 people have been killed in several days of clashes
DAMASCUS: Damascus: Syria’s defense ministry announced a ceasefire in several neighborhoods of Aleppo on Friday after days of deadly clashes with Kurdish fighters.
“To prevent any slide toward a new military escalation within residential neighborhoods, the Ministry of Defense announces ... a ceasefire in the vicinity of the Sheikh Maqsoud, Alashrafieh, and Bani Zeid neighborhoods of Aleppo, effective from 3:00 am,” the ministry wrote in a statement.
Syrian government forces have been fighting the Kurdish-led SDF force in Aleppo, where at least 21 people have been killed in several days of clashes.
Both sides have traded blame over who started the clashes on Tuesday, which comes as implementation stalls on a deal to merge the Kurds’ administration and military into the government.
The worst violence in Aleppo since Syria’s Islamist authorities took power has also highlighted regional tensions between Damascus ally Turkiye and Israel, which condemned what it described as attacks against the Kurds.










