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Daily Mirror
Daily Mirror
World
Rachel Hagan

First Brit allowed back to UK from Syria camp with her child after ISIS war

Two British nationals, a woman taken to Syria by ISIS and her child, have been repatriated from a camp in north-east Syria back to the UK.

In a groundbreaking move, the woman and her child are the first Britons who have been allowed back since the end of the ISIS war.

Local officials met with the British delegation in the Kurdish-controlled region of northeast Syria and received the woman and her child from the camp.

Jonathan Hargreaves, the UK Special Representative for Syria, confirmed the repatriations in a Twitter post on Wednesday, following the visit of a British delegation to the Kurdish-controlled region.

He said that the British government considers each request for consular assistance in Syria on a case-by-case basis, "taking into account all relevant considerations, including national security".

Al-Hol camp in Syrias northeastern Hassakeh province (AFP via Getty Images)

The identity of the woman has been kept anonymous and Reprieve, a British human rights charity, asked that her name stays protected.

Reprieve has been monitoring the woman's case and said she was “a victim of trafficking, taken to Syria by a male relative when she was a young girl” and that “she and her child have suffered extreme trauma”.

It is estimated that around 60 Britons, including 35 children, are being held in indefinite detention in Syria, most of whom were captured during the final days of the war in 2019 and have been held in indefinite detention in camps such as al-Hawl.

Kurdish-run al-Hol camp, which holds relatives of suspected Islamic State (AFP via Getty Images)

In total, 252 children and 93 women have been repatriated in 2022. Yet around 11,000 foreign children and women remain in camps in northeast Syria.

The most famous British case is that of Shamima Begum who fled from Bethnal Green in east London and travelled to Syria when she was 15.

All three of Ms Begum’s children are now deceased and her youngest, Jarrah, died shortly after her arrival at al-Hawl camp due to the terrible conditions.

Last month, a 6-year-old child reportedly died after being run over by a truck in the camp, while other children recently witnessed their mother’s dead body abandoned by the side of the road as killings in the camp increased by 250 per cent in the second quarter of this year.

“The UK Government is effectively creating a Guantanamo for children in Syria", said Reprieve.

Rights & Security International (RSI), reported that since June 2021 a total of 206 children and 76 women have been repatriated by Albania, Belgium, Denmark, Finland, France, Germany, the Netherlands, Sweden and Ukraine.

The US and a number of other countries had repatriated "most" of their nationals, but the UK remains an outlier and until Wednesday had repatriated no women and only a handful of children.

A general view of al-Hol displacement camp (REUTERS)

The British Home Office has also removed the citizenship from some of those who travelled to Syria, including Ms Begum, in a move that human rights organisations have condemned as unlawful.

Countries fear that some of the detainees posed a security risk due to their affiliation with Islamic State.

But human rights groups and authorities running the camp say that the existence of the camps proves more of a source of empowerment to Isis than containment of threat.

The Mirror has contacted the UK Foreign Office for comment.

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