UN expert decries forced separation of boys from mothers in Syrian detention camps
Geneva, Switzerland (AFP):
Adolescent boys are systematically being separated from their mothers in detention camps in northeast Syria, a UN expert has said and warned that the practice is causing irreparable harm and is a blatant violation of international law.
Fionnuala Ni Aolain said that during a visit to the Kurdish-controlled camps she noted “the separation of hundreds of adolescent boys from their mothers without any legal procedure”.
This appeared in particular to be happening to so-called third-country nationals — those from countries other than Syria and Iraq.
This is “summary separation based on an unproven security risk that male children pose upon reaching the age of adolescence,” she told journalists in Geneva after a five-day visit to Syria.
“Every single boy child I met was clearly traumatized by the separation from their mothers,” she said, adding that she had seen separated boys as young as 11.
“This systematic practice of enforced separation … is in clear violation of international law”.
Ni Aolain, the special rapporteur on the promotion and protection of human rights while countering terrorism, is the first UN rights expert to have gained access to detention camps and prisons in northeast Syria.
Repatriation ‘urgently’ needed
An estimated 52,000 people — nationals from 57 countries — are still reportedly being held in the squalid and overcrowded al-Hol and al-Roj detention camps for former recruits of militant groups and their family members in Kurdish-administered territory.
Sixty percent of the people there are children, mostly under the age of 12, said Ni Aolain.
She acknowledged the intense political and security complexity of the situation on the ground.
But that in no way justified “the mass indefinite and arbitrary detention of children, particularly boys, in various types of facilities”, she added.
Their repatriation needed to happen “urgently”, she insisted, stressing that besides the US-backed local authorities, all the home countries bore responsibility for the rights violations taking place.
Western governments have faced mounting criticism for refusing to take back their citizens who travelled years ago to Iraq and Syria to volunteer for ISIS.