Turkey Airstrike in Syria Claims Nine Lives, Sparks Outcry

Kurdish officials are expressing alarm over the potential resurgence of the Islamic State (IS) in northeast Syria as cuts to US foreign aid threaten essential services in camps housing suspected IS members and their families. The Blumont aid group, managing the al-Hol and al-Roj camps, received a stop-work order from the US State Department on January 24, leading to panic among detainees. According to Jihan Hanan, director of the al-Hol camp, the cessation of aid could halt even basic provisions like bread.
Currently housing mostly women and children, the al-Hol camp has conditions described as inhumane by rights groups. There are no charges against most detainees, leaving them trapped in these facilities. While IS has lost territorial control since March 2019, officials warn that the group's ideology persists and that conditions in the camps may facilitate recruitment of new members. Hanan cautioned that a security vacuum created by aid cuts could lead to chaos, allowing IS sleeper cells to gain influence and potentially attack the camp administration.