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‘Rampant violence’ in Syrian camp for ISIL-linked detainees: MSF | ISIL/ISIS News


Residents say conditions in the northeastern Syrian camp were akin to living in a ‘death camp’ amid routine lawlessness and crime.

Residents of the al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria have experienced routine “violence and exploitation” with no formal legal policies to protect them in what they describe as a “death camp”, a new report by Doctors Without Borders (MSF) has said.

Al-Hol camp is located in a region controlled by the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) and holds displaced refugees, as well as families of ISIL (ISIS) fighters, including thousands of foreigners. It is the largest camp in the war-torn country, housing around 60,000 people, the vast majority women and children.

“Under the auspices of the global fight against the ISIL group, exceptional policies have been implemented involving the indefinite and arbitrary detention of women, children and men in al-Hol camp in northeast Syria,” the report said.

The authors of the report said the measures had failed to “ensure safety and security” for those detained in the camp.

“Residents have described themselves as being trapped ‘between two fires’: on the one side, the persistent threat of extreme violence committed by armed groups in the camp, and on the other, the increasingly harsh security measures implemented by camp authorities in an attempt to manage the situation in al-Hol,” the report noted.

Fighting earlier this year between ISIL and the SDF in al-Hol killed three camp residents, including a child.

More than three years ago a United States-led coalition captured the Syrian village of Baghuz, the last chunk of territory held by ISIL, which had previously controlled large parts of Iraq and Syria, killing thousands.

A picture shows the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp, which holds relatives of suspected Islamic State (IS) group fighters in the northeastern Hasakeh governorate, during a security operation by the Kurdish Asayish security forces and the special forces of the Syrian Democratic Forces, on August 26, 2022
Many children have effectively been raised in al-Hol, with few prospects [File: Delil Souleiman/AFP]

‘Like Guantanamo’

One camp resident described the situation in the camp as “horrible”. “We are in al-Hol because they promised us freedom, they promised us good conditions,” the person said.

“I was pregnant and I had five children, so I decided to leave Baghuz. Now I regret having left. I believed it would be true, that we would be free, but nothing. If I’d known, I would have preferred to die than come here.”

For others, the camp felt like “Guantanamo Bay” and a “death camp”.

“Once my dad was at the main gate but they wouldn’t allow me even to see him at the gate,” another resident said. “This is when I thought: ‘Yes, we are in prison.’ We need people to be able to visit us, and we need to be able to interact with the outside world.”

The report highlighted that criminal activities were rampant in the camp, including theft and extortion, with crime-related deaths accounting for “38 percent of all deaths” at al-Hol.

“I was walking with a friend at sunrise and we saw a blanket. In it there was a dead body. We didn’t do anything because we were too afraid of the security forces. But the body had no head,” a resident told MSF.

Residents said there was a lack of protection with security forces reluctant to help, or only responding when it was too late.

The MSF recommended that a long-term solution be worked out by coalition forces that includes “access to due process” – including the right to a free trial where residents of the camp can fight the legality and necessity of their detention.

Moreover, MSF said countries should accelerate the repatriation process for what it said was more than 11,000 foreign nationals still in the camp. The group said that a number of countries had previously refused to take their citizens back or even rendered them stateless.

A few countries, such as France, Belgium and Australia have recently repatriated citizens from al-Hol.



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