Iraqi refugee found dead in al-Hawl camp, Syria’s Hasakah
HASAKAH, Syria (North Press) – An Iraqi refugee was found dead in al-Hawl camp, east of Hasakah, hours after the camp’s campaign launched by camp’s security forces with the support of Global Coalition in the immigrant sector (al-Mohajerat, ISIS’ families) inside the camp.
Security forces found the body of an Iraqi refugee named Muhammad Sami Muhammad, who owns an Internet shop in the camp, on Wednesday afternoon after the end of work hours of the camp administration.
The camp administration directs the accusation against ISIS wives for the crime, while the source suggested that the reason behind his killing was that he cut off the internet from the entire camp during the hours of the security campaign inside the immigrant sector, which houses about eleven thousand ISIS wives and children.
The camp administration reduced the entry of citric acid into the camp as a result of finding large quantities of inflammable bottles inside ISIS wives, tents, consisting of citric acid, alcohol, and other materials, according to the source.
The security forces began a security sweep campaign in the Migrant Women sector on Wednesday in order to identify and record data and information about ISIS wives, with the aim of controlling security and preventing terrorist acts in the region and the world, in order to inform the motherland of the camp residents and invite them to do their duty to provide the necessary support, "according to a statement by the Autonomous Administration of North and East Syria.
Al-Hawl camp contains the largest number of ISIS women and children from Syria and Iraq, and their number reaches 11 thousand people, according to the camp administration.
With a total of more than 65 thousand people, distributed in 13 thousand tents, including more than 40 thousand children.