The Guardian - 31.08.2019

(ff) #1
Sat urday 31 Aug ust 2019 The Guardian •

World^41
Islamic State

‘These women are monsters’


Sowing the seeds of a new


caliphate in camp from hell


Bethan McKernan
Al-Hawl , Syria

T


he vast scale of al-Hawl
can be seen from miles
away, on the road that
leads to the camp
from the west. The
white tents housing
the displaced women and children
of Islamic State stretch out over the
dusty Syrian landscape far beyond
the adjacent town’s outskirts, to the
foot of a distant hill.
Deep inside a section reserved for
foreigners, and beyond the control
of the camp’s overwhelmed guards,
is an area known as Jabal Baghuz,
or Baghuz Mountain, named by the
women who live there for the oasis
town on the Euphrates River where
their husbands were fi nally defeated
in March. Jabal Baghuz is now the
only place where Isis’s so-called
caliphate lives on. It is from here that
the seeds of the group’s resurgence
are being sown.
“It’s a timebomb waiting to go
off. There is no easy solution,”
said Gen Mazloum Kobani of the
Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF),
the western-backed, mainly
Kurdish group now responsible for
administering much of Isis’s former
territory. “Even if the foreigners are
sent home, the majority are Syrian
and Iraqi detainees and if they are
not deradicalised that will be a
problem for many years to come.”
Recent Pentagon and UN reports
say that while Isis is unlikely to
regain its former strength in Syria,
an insurgency is fast evolving. While
fi ghters sit in Kurdish prisons or slip
back into the local population in
Deir Ezzor province and Isis’s former
capital , Raqqa, thousands of families
wait for them in al-Hawl. US offi cials
describe Isis as active inside, using
the camp as an incubator for the
next generation of extremists.
Since 2016 al-Hawl has been home
to around 10,000 Iraqis and Syrians
who fl ed Isis. During the weeks-
long battle for Baghuz, however,
the camp was fl ooded with an
unexpected 64,000 new women and
children, the vast majority of which
have links to the jihadist group.
There are just 400 guards to keep
order over thousands of women,
among them vengeful individuals
intent on attacking the Kurdish
soldiers and aid workers as well as
anyone in the camp who does not
obey Isis’s strict rules or who are
suspected of spying for the SDF.
Camp offi cials said that at least
two women inside had been killed
by the most radical detainees.
Last month, an Azerbaijani
woman smothered her 14-year-
old granddaughter to death for
refusing to wear the niqab. Yazda, an

organisation representing the Yazidi
ethnic minority who were murdered
and enslaved by Isis, also reported a
Yazidi woman as having been killed
in al-Hawl.
Although none of the women
are allowed mobile phones, two
propaganda videos where children
pledge their allegiance to Isis in
front of the group’s black fl ag have
surfaced in recent weeks. Their
detention in hot, overcrowded and
unsanitary conditions has now
become a rallying cry for supporters

across Isis’s social media networks.
“As if life in this place wasn’t bad
enough these women are monsters,”
said one al-Hawl resident who asked
not to be named to avoid retribution.
“I can’t get the medicine I need for
my son when he’s sick, the toilets are
overfl owing. And then these women
will burn your tent and beat your
children just because they can.”
The camp is ringed by a fence and
monitored by the SDF and a local
police force known as the Asayish.
Despite their AK-47s, however, the

guards and the camp’s population
know who really holds the balance
of power inside.
A core of Tunisian, Somali and
Russian-speaking women in Jabal
Baghuz issue orders to the other
women. Kitchen knives distributed
by aid organisations have been used
to attack the outnumbered SDF.
Last month, one soldier died of her
wounds in hospital and two more
have been seriously injured.
Aylül, the camp’s head of security,
winced as she rolled up the sleeve of
her fatigues to reveal a huge purple-
yellow bruise covering her upper
arm. “One of them bit me ,” she said.
“The worst thing is when the women
encourage the children to throw
stones. They tell them we killed their
fathers and destroyed their homes. ”
When the women and children
were evacuated from the fi ghting
and bought to al-Hawl, any relief at
escaping US-led coalition airstrikes
and starvation was shortlived: at
least 255 children in al-Hawl have
died since January, mostly infants
suff ering from cold and malnutrition
on arrival. Anger at the conditions is
growing. The families are exposed
to extreme heat and cold in fl imsy
tents, there are traces of E coli in
the drinking water and inadequate
healthcare. There are no educational
facilities for children.

The SDF has not dared go inside
the 12,000-strong foreign section of
the camp in the last three months,
after a routine weapons search
almost triggered a full-scale riot
when thousands of its inhabitants
surged up to the camp’s front gate
and administration buildings.
One soldier’s discomfort inside
the main section for Syrians and
Iraqis was palpable. Nervously
gripping his gun, he hurried the
Guardian’s reporting team along
every few minutes. Two of his
colleagues refused to leave the
armoured pick-up truck.
Progress on repatriating citizens
is slow. Yet each day the former cubs
of the caliphate spend in al-Hawl
is another day of childhood gone,
making it harder to break the cycles
of radicalisation and deprivation.
One Trinidadian boy, now 15,
was taken to Syria by his father in


  1. In the last days of the battle of
    Baghuz, Isis forced him to fi ght and
    he was lucky to escape to al-Hawl
    alive. His father and siblings are
    dead and he now whiles away the
    days teaching himself maths from a
    battered textbook at one of al-Hawl’s
    two small orphanage buildings.
    “My mum knows I’m here. I miss
    her very much,” he said. “I keep
    asking : ‘Why can’t I go home?’ But
    nobody ever has a real answer.”


Majority of refugees in al-Hawl have links to Islamic State


Syria

al-Hawl

al-Hawl

The section of
the camp where
12,000 foreign
nationals are
housed

Syrians and
Iraqis live in the
main section

The camp is
surrounded by
a fence and
monitored by
the SDF and a
local police
force

Enclave known
as Jabal Baghuz

0.5 miles

500m
Guardian graphic. Image taken on 28 August 2019 by Sentinel-2B

▼ About 64,000
Isis women and
children who
were evacuated
from fi ghting
in Baghuz
earlier this
year now live in
the huge white-
tented al-Hawl
camp (left)
MAIN PHOTOGRAPH:
BÜLENT KILIÇ/AFP/
GETTY IMAGES

RELEASED BY "What's News" vk.com/wsnws TELEGRAM: t.me/whatsnws

Free download pdf