Syria: end 'indefinite detention' at SDF camps
UN experts on April 7 called for an end to the arbitrary, indefinite detention of tens of thousands of people in camps in northeast Syria. The detained individuals are those whom the local Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) have accused of adherence to the extremist group Islamic State in Iraq & the Levant (ISIL), with over 52,000 people currently held without any due process, 60% of whom are children.
Syria saw the overthrow of the Bashar Assad regime in December 2024, following the Assad family's 40-year reign and a devastating 14-year civil war that resulted in massive human rights violations and the systemic torture of thousands of people by the regime. During the civil war, much territory was lost to ISIL and opposing groups such as the Kurdish-led SDF. While the territory formerly under ISIL control has been liberated, the SDF has been detaining individuals suspected of having ISIL ties in the northeast region. Fighting has also continued between the SDF and rival Syrian National Army (SNA). Both groups have agreed to merge into the new government's national army as part of interim President Ahmed al-Sharaa's effort to unite Syria. However, the fate of those in SDF custody remains uncertain.
The SDF’s often incommunicado detentions have only added to the overall number of detentions and enforced disappearances throughout Syria during the period of Assad's rule, with estimates of over 112,000 individuals reported missing. Those held in SDF detention camps (primarily at al-Hol), are not only suspected ISIL collaborators, but also the families of suspects, children, orphans, refugees, internally displaced people, and human trafficking victims, with more than half of the detainees being non-Syrian nationals.
Human Rights Watch and UN experts—including several Special Rapporteurs and Independent Experts—have urged Syria to use the country's political transition as an opportunity to devise a solution to this crisis, with the safe integration of prisoners back into the mainstream society. Human rights experts have also recommended that other countries support Syria by repatriating their own citizens who remain detained.
From JURIST, April 7. Used with permission. Some internal links added.
Recent Updates
2 days 19 hours ago
2 days 19 hours ago
3 days 10 hours ago
3 days 15 hours ago
4 days 12 hours ago
4 days 12 hours ago
5 days 18 hours ago
1 week 21 hours ago
1 week 22 hours ago
1 week 22 hours ago