Women at Al-Hol camp collect donations to transport ISIS families
Batches of women and children have left the Al-Hol refugee camp
in northeastern Syria since July after the Roj camp was expanded in
coordination with the United Nations and the international coalition led by
Washington. The living conditions in the Roj camp are considered better than at
Al-Hol, where humanitarian and international organizations have always warned of
the difficult conditions due to overcrowding and lack of basic services,
especially in the wake of the corona pandemic.
More than 75 foreign families of ISIS fighters were
transferred from the crowded Al-Hol camp to the Roj camp in Hasakah with the
knowledge of the Kurdish Autonomous Administration and at the request of
families who showed their willingness to rehabilitate.
The less strict women asked to from Al-Hol with their
children, claiming that they are ready for rehabilitation in order to then return
to their own countries and reintegrate into their societies after showing
remorse.
According to UN estimates, Al-Hol is home to about 65,000
displaced Syrians and Iraqis, as well as thousands of fighters from about 50
countries, including 12,000 children and women, who stay in a special section under
heavy security.
In parallel with the transfer of ISIS families, the terrorist
organization is collecting donations aimed at smuggling women and children from
Al-Hol. Earlier, a woman named Maryam managed to escape and film a clip
explaining the living conditions at Al-Hol, which was published through ISIS accounts
on Facebook and Telegram.
According to a study by the Washington Institute for Near
East Policy (WINEP) entitled “Al-Hawl Camp and the Potential Resurgence of ISIS”,
the camp has become a gathering point for ISIS fighters who were captured
during various battles. Therefore, the current ISIS leadership views the camp
as a major stronghold due to the large number of ISIS supporters of various
nationalities living in the camp.
WINEP noted the basic factors that make Al-Hol camp a
stronghold for an ISIS resurgence, including that parts of the camp enjoy
greater openness to the outside world, as Syrians in particular are able to keep
relatively connected to life outside the camp, either through the legal use of
mobile devices and other means of communication, or financially through the
transfer of remittances.
The study by WINEP said that opening Al-Hol to the outside
world may provide the ability for ISIS supporters and cells inside the camp to communicate
with those affiliated with the organization around the world. Meanwhile, it is
difficult to estimate the number of women in the camp who are still loyal to
ISIS, as those who support ISIS were not separated from the rest of the camp
population. As a result, the residents inside the camp have been absorbing
extremist ideas for several years.
Despite the monitoring practiced by the Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF), terms such as killing, beheading, unbelievers, raids,
revolutionary, and caliphate are still very common in the daily life and
discussions between the ISIS families at the camp, according to the study.
The study added that ISIS women formed secret committees to
monitor the personal lives of camp residents in order to see whether or not
they still adhere to the terrorist organization's ideas.



