Explosion without bombs: QSD crying for the world after losing control of the Hul camp

The al-Houl camp is under ISIS detention camp
in Syria, is at risk of being controlled by militants, amid several attempts to
escape, infiltrate and revolt by detainees, Kurdish general Mazloum Kobani told
the Washington Post on Friday, October 4, 2019.
ISIS Women and the Danger of Control
According to Mazloum, women detained in the
camps are trying to assert their dominance over the camp, while guards at the
Houl camp in eastern Syria are failing to contain the increasing violent
behavior of some detainees.
"There is a great danger in the horror,
now, our people are able to guard the camp, but because we lack the resources,
ISIS is regrouping and reorganizing it in the camp. We cannot control them 100%
and the situation is dangerous," Mazloum said.
The International Sphinx camp in eastern Syria
is home to some 70,000 people, most of them women and children displaced by the
war against ISIS.
"There are up to 30,000 ISIS loyalists,
including the most radical extremists who chose to remain in the dwindling
caliphate until the final battle for the village of Baghoz earlier this
year," Mazloum said in a telephone interview to the newspaper from his
headquarters in Syria.
An estimated 10,000 of these foreigners came
from more than 40 countries who made the trip to join ISIS in Syria, and are
among the most extremists abiding by the rules, according to camp officials.
The message of Baghdadi
Tensions in the camp have risen sharply since
ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi gave a voice speech last month urging his
followers to "tear down the walls" of the camps and prisons housing
detainees for release, according to Syrian Defense Forces officials.
Kurdish officials say ISIS women have
established Islamic Sharia courts, similar to those at the time of the group's
rule, and impose physical punishment on ordinary camp residents who reject
their ideology.
Mazloum said that one of the most important
wishes of the QSD is for governments to reduce some of the burden on it by
returning their citizens, but most governments refuse to return them.
He said the Kurdish administration needs
funding assistance to secure detainees, feed and shelter them, as well as
equipment to secure the surrounding area at a time of increasing attempts to
escape.
While Mazloum says he believes all those who
fled in this way were foreigners, all of whom have been re-arrested, but QSD
officials acknowledge that some may have managed to escape undetected.