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Teenagers from Islamic State families undergo rehabilita­tion in Syria, but future still uncertain

- By Hogir Al Abdo & Bassem Mroue Mroue reported from Beirut. Associated Press writer Qassim Abdul-zahra contribute­d to this report from Baghdad.

QAMISHLI, Syria—for at least four years, thousands of children have been growing up in a camp in northeast Syria housing families of Islamic State group militants, raised in an atmosphere where the group’s radical ideology still circulates and where they have almost no chance for an education.

Fearing that a new generation of militants will emerge from al-hol Camp, the Kurdish officials who govern eastern and northern Syria are experiment­ing with a rehabilita­tion program aimed at pulling children out of extremist thought.

It means, however, removing them from their mothers and families for an unknown period of time, a practice that has raised concerns among rights groups. And even if they are deemed rehabilita­ted, the children’s future remains in limbo with their home countries reluctant to take them back.

“If these children stay in the camp, this will lead to the rise of a new generation of extremists who could be more fanatical than those who were before,” said Khaled Remo, co-chair of the Kurdish-led administra­tion’s office of justice and reform affairs.

Recently, an Associated Press team was allowed to visit the Orkesh Center, a rehabilita­tion facility that opened late last year. It’s home to dozens of young boys taken from al-hol. Ranging in age between 11 and 18, they represent about 15 different nationalit­ies, including France and Germany.

At Orkesh, boys are taught drawing and music, all with the theme of tolerance. They also learn skills for future jobs like a tailor or a barber. They wake up early and have breakfast at 7 a.m., then have classes until 3 p.m., after which they can play soccer and basketball. They live in dormitory-type rooms, where they are expected to keep order and their beds made. They are allowed contact with parents and siblings.

Authoritie­s did not permit the AP to speak to the boys at the center, citing privacy concerns. During a separate visit to al-hol, residents were hostile, and none agreed to be interviewe­d. The AP also approached families that were released from alhol, but none responded to requests

for comment. The newness of the program makes it difficult to assess its effectiven­ess.

Still, the center underscore­s how Us-backed Kurdish authoritie­s are wrestling with the legacy of Islamic State, years after the group was defeated in a brutal war in Syria and Iraq that ended in 2019.

Al-hol Camp is an open wound left by that conflict. The camp holds about 51,000 people, the vast majority women and children, including the wives, widows and other family members of IS militants. Most are Syrians and Iraqis. But there are also around 8,000 women and children from 60 other nationalit­ies who live in a part of the camp known as the Annex. They are generally considered the most die-hard IS supporters among the camp residents.

The camp population is down from its height of 73,000 people, mostly because of Syrians and Iraqis who were allowed to go home. But other countries have largely balked at taking back their nationals, who traveled to join IS after the radical group seized large parts of Iraq and Syria in 2014.

Though Kurdish-led security forces run the camp, they have struggled to keep control. IS radicalism remains rife, with fervent followers intimidati­ng others, particular­ly in the Annex, home to more than 5,000 children.

Children in al-hol have little to do and little chance for education. Fewer than half the 25,000 children in the camp attend reading and writing classes at its teaching centers.

During a recent tour by the AP inside al-hol, some young boys threw stones at the reporters. One drew a finger across his throat in a beheading motion as he looked at the journalist­s.

“Those kids once they reach the age of 12, they could become dangerous and could kill and beat up others,” the camp’s director Jihan Hanan told the AP.

“So we had a choice, which is to put them at rehabilita­tion centers and keep them away from the extreme ideology that their mothers carry,” she said.

Sheikhmous Ahmad, a Kurdish official overseeing camps for displaced people, said that once the boys turn 13, IS loyalists make them get married to young girls — another reason for removing them.

So far, the number of children going through rehabilita­tion is small, around 300, all of them boys from the Annex. Ninety-seven are at the recently launched Orkesh Center, near the border town of Qamishli about a two-hour drive from al-hol. The rest are at alhouri, another center that began taking in boys for rehabilita­tion in 2017, as Us-backed, Kurdish-led forces took back territory from IS in Syria.

Al-houri underscore­s the longterm problem: Some of the boys have been at the center for years since there is nowhere else to go. The only alternativ­e would be to send them back to al-hol. Only four children have been repatriate­d from al-houri, administra­tors said.

“While the transfer of these boys to separate detention centers may be well-intentione­d, this is not rehabilita­tion. This is indefinite detention without charge of children, who are themselves victims of ISIS,” said Letta Tayler, associate director of the Crisis and Conflict Division at Human Rights Watch.

She said removal from the family may be appropriat­e if the mother or another relative is victimizin­g the child. Otherwise, separation could cause further trauma.

“For many of these children, who have survived unimaginab­le horrors under ISIS and in the camps where they have been held since the fall of ISIS, the mother and other family members are their only source of stability,” she said.

Kathryn Achilles, media director of the Syria Response Office at Save the Children Internatio­nal, said separation from the mother “should only ever be as a last resort, addressed by individual countries after families return, in line with their laws.”

Hanan, the administra­tor of alhol, said they had few other options. One proposal is to set up rehabilita­tion centers in or near the camp, she said.

“Maybe in the future we can agree on something with internatio­nal organizati­ons regarding such centers as they are the best solution for these children,” Hanan said.

But Kurdish officials and humanitari­an agencies agree that the only real solution is for home countries to take back their citizens.

“Once home, children and other victims of ISIS can be offered rehabilita­tion and reintegrat­ion. Adults can be monitored or prosecuted as appropriat­e,” said Tayler of Human Rights Watch.

The U.n.-backed Independen­t Internatio­nal Commission of Inquiry on Syria called in March for repatriati­on to be sped up. It added that the suffering inflicted on the camp’s residents “may amount to the war crime of committing outrages on personal dignity.”

Until a solution is found, the centers create “an environmen­t that is suitable to pave the way for mental change for these children,” said Remo, the Kurdish official.

 ?? AP/BADERKHAN AHMAD ?? CHILDREN run in al-hol camp, which houses families of members of the Islamic State group in Hasakeh province, Syria on April 19, 2023.
AP/BADERKHAN AHMAD CHILDREN run in al-hol camp, which houses families of members of the Islamic State group in Hasakeh province, Syria on April 19, 2023.

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