Trump's aid freeze shocks a Syria camp holding families linked to the
Islamic State group
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[February 03, 2025]
By BASSEM MROUE
AL-HOL, Syria (AP) — Ahmad Abdullah Hammoud was lucky to have some food
stored to feed his family after a U.S.-funded organization abruptly
suspended its aid activities at the sprawling tent camp in northeastern
Syria where they have been forced to stay for nearly six years.
His family is among 37,000 people, mostly women and children, with
alleged ties to the Islamic State group at the bleak, trash-strewn al-Hol
camp, where the Trump administration’s unprecedented freeze on foreign
aid caused chaos and uncertainty and worsened the dire humanitarian
conditions.
Human rights groups have for years cited poor living conditions and
pervasive violence in the camp, which houses mostly wives and children
of IS fighters as well as supporters of the militant group.
When the freeze was announced shortly after Trump took office,
U.S.-funded aid programs worldwide began shutting down operations,
including the organization that runs many operations at al-Hol, which
works under the supervision of the U.S.-led coalition formed to fight
IS.
The U.S.-based Blumont briefly suspended operations, according to the
camp's director. It had been providing essentials such as bread, water,
kerosene and cooking gas. Blumont didn't reply to questions.
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“We were troubled when Blumont suspended its activities," said Hammoud,
who denies links with IS and had been sheltering in an IS-controlled
area after being displaced during Syria's civil war.
“Believe me, we did not find food. Even bread only came at 2 p.m,” said
another camp resident, Dirar al-Ali.
Camp director Jihan Hanan told The Associated Press that other aid
agencies, including the World Health Organization, had ceased some
operations.
“It is a disgraceful decision,” Hanan said of the Trump administration's
action, adding that some residents argued they should be allowed to
leave if food cannot be provided.
She said Blumont distributes 5,000 bags of bread daily at a cost of
about $4,000, something that local authorities in the Kurdish-run
enclave cannot afford.
Uncertain times ahead
Hanan said Blumont received a two-week waiver from the Trump
administration and resumed work on Jan. 28. It is not clear what will
happen once the waiver ends.
Mazloum Abdi, the commander of the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces
that control northeastern Syria, said he has raised the aid freeze issue
with officials from the U.S.-led coalition.
“We are on the verge of finding an alternative to this decision,” Abdi
said, adding that an exemption might be issued for northeastern Syria.
The U.S. freeze comes as IS tries to take advantage of the vacuum
created by the fall of Assad’s government in early December to
insurgents. Another cut in food supplies could lead to riots by camp
residents that IS, which has sleeper cells there, could exploit.
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Hanan said the camp had received information from the U.S.-led
coalition against IS, the Iraqi government and the U.S.-backed and
Kurdish-led SDF, that IS was preparing to attack the camp after
Assad’s fall. Security was increased and the situation is under
control, she said.
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Hanan said the camp had received information from the U.S.-led
coalition against IS, the Iraqi government and the U.S.-backed and
Kurdish-led SDF, that IS was preparing to attack the camp after
Assad’s fall. Security was increased and the situation is under
control, she said.
The SDF runs 28 detention facilities in northeastern Syria holding
some 9,000 IS members. Security at al-Hol camp and the detention
facilities are not expected to be affected by the U.S. aid freeze,
according to Hanan and an official at the largest detention facility
in the northeastern city of Hassakeh, who spoke on condition of
anonymity in line with regulations.
The main part of al-Hol houses some 16,000 Iraqis and 15,000
Syrians. In a separate, heavily guarded section known as the Annex
are another 6,300 people from 42 countries, the vast majority of
them wives, widows and children who are considered the most die-hard
IS supporters.
The camp has no paved roads and piles of trash. Teenagers and
children with almost nothing to do spend their time playing soccer
or wandering around.
Children in the Annex threw stones at visiting AP journalists and
shouted “You are a Satan" and “The Islamic State is lasting.”
'Sustenance is from God'
A Chinese woman in the Annex, who identified herself as Asmaa Ahmad
and said she came from the western region of Xinjiang, described her
husband as “an Islamic State martyr” killed in 2019 in the eastern
Syrian village of Baghouz, where IS lost the last sliver of land it
once controlled.
Ahmad, who is in the camp with her four children, said she does not
want to go back to China, fearing persecution. Asked about the
temporary loss of U.S. aid, she replied: “Sustenance is from God.”
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She said she is waiting for IS members to rescue her family one day.
Al-Hol is the most dangerous place in the world, camp director Hanan
asserted, adding that countries should repatriate their citizens to
prevent children being fed the extremist ideology. “This place is
not suitable for children,” she said.
The U.S. military has been pushing for years for countries who have
citizens at al-Hol and the smaller, separate Roj Camp to repatriate
them.
“Without international repatriation, rehabilitation and
reintegration efforts, these camps risk creating the next generation
of ISIS,” Gen. Michael Erik Kurilla, head of U.S. Central Command,
said during a visit to al-Hol in mid-January.
Hanan said that since the fall of Assad, many Syrians in the camp
have expressed a desire to return to their homes in areas held by
the country’s new rulers. She said camp authorities decided that any
Syrian who wants to leave can go.
Even if the camp population drops, “there will be a disaster" if
U.S. aid is suspended again, she added.
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