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Kurds say 53 Daesh members arrested in Syria’s Al-Hol camp

Kurds say 53 Daesh members arrested in Syria’s Al-Hol camp
Member of Kurdish internal security forces watches Syrian families released from the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp where Kurdish authorities arrested 53 suspected Islamic State [IS] group members in a security operation Tuesday. (AFP)
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Updated 31 March 2021

Kurds say 53 Daesh members arrested in Syria’s Al-Hol camp

Kurds say 53 Daesh members arrested in Syria’s Al-Hol camp
  • Kurdish authorities have warned that settlement, home of 62,000 people, is turning into an extremist powder keg because of Daesh militants hiding among residents
  • Residents stood outside their tents watching the anti-terrorist squad scour the area

SYRIA: Kurdish forces said Tuesday they had arrested 53 suspected Daesh group members in a northeast Syria camp for relatives of militants, in an anti-Daesh security operation.
The US-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) launched Sunday the sweep in Al-Hol camp, which has been rocked by assassinations and breakout attempts.
Kurdish authorities have warned that the settlement, home to almost 62,000 people, is turning into an extremist powder keg because of Daesh militants hiding out among camp residents.
The Kurds’ Asayish security forces said they had “detained 53 Daesh members, including five leaders of Daesh sleeper cells that carried out violent terrorist attacks in the camp.”
They had also “confiscated mobile phones and several laptops,” the SDF-allied police unit added.
Heavily-armed Kurdish forces stood guard outside the camp as others stormed suspected hideouts inside the vast settlement, an AFP reporter said.
In some sections, residents stood outside their tents watching the anti-terrorist squad scour the area.
Al-Hol is the larger of two Kurdish-run displacement camps for relatives of Daesh militants in Syria’s northeast.
It holds mostly Syrians and Iraqis but also thousands from Europe and Asia suspected of family ties with Daesh fighters.
Many residents see the camp as the last vestige of the Daesh proto-state that militants declared in 2014 across large swathes of both Syria and Iraq.
Kurdish authorities have recorded more than 40 murders in Al-Hol since the start of this year.
They say Daesh sympathizers are behind most of the murders, while humanitarian aid sources have said tribal disputes could be behind some of the killings.
Simand Ali, a Kurdish official, told AFP militants had dug trenches in Al-Hol that they used to hide prohibited electronic devices and other goods.
Those detained so far have mostly been Syrians and Iraqis, he said.