ISIS families escape SDF-controlled camp, news of deals with Syrian govt.

An offensive by Turkey and its Syrian opposition
allies is nearing a camp for displaced people in Ain Issa, northern Syria
holding thousands of members of “ISIS families,” some of whom have managed to
escape after the site was shelled, Kurdish officials from the Syrian Democratic
Forces (SDF) said.
The UK-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights
reported 100 members of ISIS families have already fled the camp.
The shelling of the camp at Ain Issa north of Raqqa
represented the “support for the revival of the Daesh [ISIS] organization once
again,” the Kurdish-led administration for northern and eastern Syria said.
The Autonomous Administration of North and East
Syria demanded that the UN security council, the international coalition
fighting ISIS, the Arab League, and the European Union to quickly intervene to
prevent a “disaster”.
On the other hand, a local media outlet named
“Euphrates Post” reported on Sunday SDF’s release of ISIS leader Omar al-Amouri
in a deal with the Syrian government forces in Deir Ezzor.
Al-Amouri, also known as Abu Bakr al-Homsi or Abu
Bakr Qareyten, was released around a week ago, the post says, adding that he
left to Damascus several days ago.
The ISIS leader was known to be the mediator between
the Syrian government forces and ISIS regarding oil trading, according to the
report, and he was in direct contact with the Syrian lawmaker Hossam
al-Katerji, who is a shareholder in a company sanctioned by the US for trading
with ISIS.