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Women, children from 57 states in Syria camps — UN expert
By AFP - Feb 08,2021 - Last updated at Feb 08,2021
GENEVA — Fifty-seven countries have women and children living in squalid detention camps in northeast Syria, a United Nations expert said Monday, calling on states to repatriate their nationals immediately.
Fionnuala Ni Aolain said they were living in “sub-human conditions” in the Al Hol and Roj camps, being run by Kurdish forces.
“The camps hold over 64,000 people, mostly women and children. Many of them are highly vulnerable. Many of them are experiencing a range of human rights concerns that require states to act expediently,” she told reporters in Geneva, via video-link.
Ni Aolain, the special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism, said her call was backed by a dozen other independent UN experts, who do not speak for the UN, but report their findings to it.
She said she had conveyed her demands in detailed letters to each concerned country, including Australia, Bangladesh, Belgium, Britain, Canada, China, France, Germany, India, Pakistan, Russia, Switzerland, Turkey and the United States.
“It is the first time that these 57 states have been named together,” said Ni Aolain.
“This isn’t a club you want to belong to.”
Using figures from June 2020, she said that the Al Hol camp holds around 64,000 people, of which more than 80 per cent were women and children.
Some 48 per cent of those in the camp are Iraqis, 37 per cent are Syrians and 15 per cent are third-country nationals.
The foreigners are families of militants from the Daesh group, which seized swathes of Iraq and Syria in 2014.
The Iraqi and Syrian residents of the camp largely fled subsequent fighting between Daesh and Kurdish forces.
“These children and women are living in what can only be described as horrific sub-human conditions. And we offer our concerns that the conditions in these camps may reach the threshold of torture, inhuman and degrading treatment under international law,” said Ni Aolain.
The Irish expert said comparisons with Guantanamo Bay, the US detention camp on Cuba, were appropriate.
“This is not a refugee camp. This is a camp in which people are being held without legal process, with no choice, in conditions that are inhumane,” she said.
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