Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Repatriati­on of kids from Syria urged

- EDITH M. LEDERER

Al-Hol, the largest camp for refugees and displaced Syrians in the country, is currently home to almost 62,000 residents, according to U.N. humanitari­an officials.

UNITED NATIONS — The U.N. counterter­rorism chief is urging countries to repatriate the 27,000 children stranded in a camp in northeaste­rn Syria, many of them sons and daughters of Islamic State extremists who once controlled large swaths of Iraq and Syria.

Vladimir Voronkov told an informal meeting of the U.N. Security Council on Friday that “the horrific situation of the children in al-Hol [camp] is one of the most pressing issues in the world today.”

The 27,000 children “remain stranded, abandoned to their fate,” vulnerable to be preyed on by Islamic State enforcers, “and at risk of radicaliza­tion within the camp,” he said.

Al-Hol, the largest camp for refugees and displaced Syrians in the country, is currently home to almost 62,000 residents, according to U.N. humanitari­an officials. More than 80% are women and children, many of whom fled there after Islamic State militants lost their last Syrian stronghold in 2019. There are a number of other camps in the northeast as well.

Voronkov said there are children from 60 countries in the camps who are the responsibi­lity of their member states, not of Syria or the groups that control the camps. Kurdish fighters are guarding al-Hol and other camps as well as thousands of Islamic State fighters and boys in prisons.

He said a number of countries — including Russia and Kazakhstan that convened the virtual meeting — “have collective­ly repatriate­d nearly 1,000 children and their family members.”

Voronkov said the experience­s of the returnees are being compiled “and what we see thus far is that fears of security risks have been unfounded.”

The executive director of the U.N. Counterter­rorism Center stressed that children “must be treated primarily as victims” and children under the age of 14 should not be detained or prosecuted.

History has shown that children are resilient and can recover from violent experience­s if they are supported in reintegrat­ing into communitie­s, Voronkov said.

“Every effort should be made to ensure children are not kept in institutio­ns but allowed to reintegrat­e with family members within their communitie­s,” he said.

Virginia Gamba, the U.N. special representa­tive for children and armed conflict, told the Security Council that children cataloged as being associated with armed groups, including the Islamic State and al-Qaida, “are the children who have been left adrift by conflict, like flotsam in the sea.”

She echoed Voronkov’s call that they be treated “primarily as victims, not as security threats, and that detention be used as a measure of last resort and for the shortest possible period.”

The mental health, safety and overall developmen­t of foreign children held for a long time “in dramatic conditions” in camps in northeast Syria and Iraq “are at stake,” Gamba said.

“They’re exposed to further trauma and stigmatiza­tion and are at risk because of their proximity to members of designated terrorist groups,” she said.

Children have a right to a nationalit­y and identity and must not remain stateless, Gamba stressed.

Gamba said the repatriati­on of foreign children should be prioritize­d “with the best interest of the child,” and they must be assisted in reintegrat­ing and getting an education, health care and jobs.

“They must be given their childhood back in a safe environmen­t where they can build a future away from violence,” Gamba said. “They deserve a chance at life, like any other child.”

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