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Asharq Al-Awsat
Asharq Al-Awsat
World
Asharq Al-Awsat

US-Backed Syrian Forces Free Women in 3-Week Raid of ISIS Camp

Children gather outside their tents, at al-Hol camp, which houses families of members of the ISIS group, in Hassakeh province, Syria, May 1, 2021. (AP)

US-backed Syrian fighters said Saturday they have concluded a 24-day sweep at a sprawling camp in northeast Syria housing tens of thousands of women and children linked to the ISIS group.

Dozens of extremists were detained and weapons were confiscated in the operation at al-Hol camp, which began on Aug. 25, the US-backed forces said. The US-backed force said two of its fighters were killed in clashes with extremists inside the camp during the operation.

ISIS sleeper cells preparing a new generation of militants — boys and girls being fed extremist ideology to eventually try and set up a second so-called ISIS “caliphate” — were also uncovered, the statement by the Internal Security Forces said.

It added that the operation was assisted by the US-backed Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), as well as members of the US-led coalition.

“The operation was launched following the increasing crimes of killing and torture committed by ISIS cells against the camp residents,” said the statement from the US-backed forces.

It added that since the beginning of the year, the extremists have killed 44 camp residents and humanitarian workers.

The statement also said that 226 people, including 36 women, were detained in al-Hol — widely seen as a breeding ground for the ISIS.

Some 50,000 Syrians and Iraqis are crowded into tents in the fenced-in camp. Nearly 20,000 of them are children; most of the rest are women, wives and widows of ISIS fighters.

In a separate, heavily guarded section of the camp known as the annex are an additional 2,000 women from 57 other countries — they are considered the most die-hard ISIS supporters — along with their children, numbering about 8,000.

“ISIS has depended mainly on women and children, as real resources related directly to the ISIS leaders, to maintain the ISIS extremist ideology and spread it in the camp,” the statement said.

The camp was initially used to house the families of ISIS fighters in late 2018 as US-backed Kurdish-led forces recaptured territory in eastern Syria from the militants. In March 2019, they seized the last ISIS-held villages, ending the “caliphate” that the group had declared over large parts of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

The United States and other nations have struggled to repatriate the families, but have had only very limited success.

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