ISIS Women Accused of Killing Iraqi Refugee in al-Hol Camp
Preliminary investigations revealed Thursday that
ISIS women were involved in the killing of an Iraqi refugee in Syria’s al-Hol
camp last week, a security official from the camp’s administration told Asharq
Al-Awsat.
The official, speaking on condition of anonymity,
said that the refugee called “Hamada,” who worked as a civilian volunteer,
received four gunshot wounds from a gun with a silencer.
“Early investigations reveal the involvement of
armed women from ISIS,” he said.
On Aug. 13, al-Hol camp, located 45 km east of the
city of al-Hasakah in northeastern Syria, witnessed an armed attack in the
sector designated for Iraqi refugees. Three refugees were wounded.
He stressed that such incidents have been frequent
in the past year, saying at least one refugee is murdered each month at the
camp.
The camp is home to thousands of refugees, the
majority of whom are Iraqi women and children.
Al-Hol also houses the families of ISIS members. The
families make up the majority of the residents, who came to the camp after the
group lost its territories in Iraq and Syria in the spring of 2019.
Iraqis make up some 40,000 of al-Hol’s 68,000
residents. The camp is home to women and children who have been abandoned by
ISIS fathers, who headed to the battlefronts where they were either killed or
captured. Little is known of the ISIS prisoners after the Baghdad government
abandoned them.
Separately, the camp’s autonomous administration
moved around 60 families of foreign nationals to al-Roj camp, located west of
the city of Malikiya.



