More than 800 Iraqis repatriated from notorious Syria camp

People stand with their belongings as Iraqi nationals prepare to leave the Kurdish-run al-Hol camp in Syria’s northeastern al-Hasakah governorate, ahead of their return to Iraq on August 28, 2025. More than 800 Iraqi nationals left northeast Syria's Al-Hol camp on August 28, an official told AFP, the latest batch to quit the notorious Kurdish-administered camp that also hosts suspected relatives of Islamic State group jihadists. (Photo by Delil SOULEIMAN / AFP)
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  • More than 800 Iraqi nationals left northeast Syria’s Al-Hol camp on Thursday, the latest batch to quit the notorious camp that holds suspected relatives of Daesh fighters

DAMASCUS: More than 800 Iraqi nationals left northeast Syria’s Al-Hol camp on Thursday, the facility’s director told AFP, the latest batch to quit the notorious camp that holds suspected relatives of Daesh group fighters.
Jihan Hanan, director of the Kurdish-administered camp, said that “there are approximately 850 people departing today.”
She added that since the start of the year, about 10,000 Iraqis have left Al-Hol in 11 batches.
Kurdish-run camps and prisons in Syria’s northeast hold tens of thousands of people, many with alleged or perceived links to IS, more than six years after the group’s territorial defeat in Syria.
Al-Hol is northeast Syria’s largest camp, and its residents have been living in dire conditions.
Umm Mahmud, 60, an Iraqi woman departing the camp, told AFP: “We’ve suffered greatly in Al-Hol, psychologically, physically and financially.”
“Look at the children, look how happy they are. It’s like a holiday,” she said.
Hanan said the camp now housed approximately 27,000 people, including some 15,000 Syrians and about 6,300 foreign women and children from 42 nationalities, in addition to some 5,000 Iraqis.
While many Western countries refuse to take back their nationals, Baghdad has taken the lead by accelerating repatriations and urging others to follow suit.
In February, Kurdish official Sheikhmous Ahmed said the administration aimed to empty camps in Syria’s northeast of thousands of displaced Syrians and Iraqi refugees, including suspected relatives of jihadists, by the end of the year.
IS seized swathes of Syria and neighboring Iraq in 2014, before being territorially defeated in Syria in 2019, but has since maintains a presence there, particularly in the country’s vast desert.