At least 5000 ISIS terrorists with AIDS, hepatitis and other diseases plead to be sent to their home countries
Behind the steel door, the cell is as packed as their eyes are empty – haggard, scrawny prisoners in orange jumpsuits lying head-to-toe cover every inch of floor space.
An AFP team was given rare access to one of the crowded detention facilities in northeastern Syria where Kurdish forces are holding Islamic State group (IS) suspects.
As a Turkish offensive launched against Kurdish forces earlier this month wreaks chaos in the area, just how solid such doors will be is a question keeping the world on edge.
The men crammed into poorly fortified jails such as this one in Hasakeh hail from dozens of countries that don’t want them free – but don’t want them back either.
With 5,000 inmates – Syrian, Iraqi, but also British, French, German – the prison is bursting with the flotsam of the international jihadist army IS raised five years ago.
The group is accused of carrying out widespread atrocities in territory it once controlled across Iraq and Syria, including mass executions, rape, enslavement and torture, much of it filmed for propaganda.
‘I want to leave the prison and go back home to my family,’ says Aseel Mathan, 22.
The lank young man left his native Wales when he was still 17, to join his brother in Mosul, the northern Iraqi city where the IS ‘caliphate’ was born.
When his brother was killed, he moved across the Syrian border to Raqa, the other main hub of the now-defunct jihadist proto-state.
‘I want to go back to Britain,’ Mathan said, adding he wished he hadn’t answered the call to arms issued in 2014 by Baghdadi, who according to the US was killed hours after the young Welshman spoke to AFP.
One nine-year-old boy from central Asia named Khaled pops his head out of the hatch to see who the visitor might be, smiling to the guard who asks him to calm down his boisterous cellmates.
Close to a third of the prison’s population is sick and needs treatment for a variety of wounds and conditions that include hepatitis and AIDS.
Only around 300 of them can spend the night in the medical ward, among them Aballah Nooman, a 24-year-old Belgian who lifts his T-shirt to show an open wound.
‘My organs are spilling out,’ he says, explaining that he sustained the wound from a fellow jihadist who accidentally shot him while cleaning his weapon.
Some of the detainees are teenagers, and none of them have been under the sun even once in months or more.
Their grey foam mattresses overlap to carpet the cold floor, with only one corner of the cell taken by a basic, half walled-off pit latrine.
The stench is overwhelming in the nearby medical ward, where visitors are given surgical masks at the door.
They have virtually no knowledge of what is happening outside, their days measured only by the absent-minded thumbing of beads and the five daily Muslim prayers.
The prisoners have not heard that on Sunday US President Donald Trump announced the death of IS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi in a US raid in northwest Syria.
‘They have absolutely no contact with the outside world,’ says the prison governor, who gave his name as Serhat and asked that the exact location of the facility be withheld.
The Kurdish authorities say more than 50 nationalities are represented in the Kurdish-run prisons where more than 12,000 IS suspects are now held.
Not all IS fighters were caught by Kurdish and US-led coalition forces in the dying days of the ‘caliphate’ and the jihadist group has continued to attack its enemies through clandestine cells roaming the region.
Some days, governor Serhat says, fugitive jihadists ‘come near the prison and open fire, just as a way of telling the detainees that they are still there.’
From France to Tunisia, many of the IS prisoners’ countries of origins have been reluctant to repatriate them, fearing a public backlash at home.
With support from their main US ally more unpredictable than ever, and under constant pressure from their archfoe Turkey, the Syrian Kurds’ autonomous administration can barely protect itself, let alone foreign detainees.
Kurdish forces have repeatedly warned that a Turkish invasion – which became a reality on October 9 – could result in mass prison breaks that would release some of the world’s most fanatic terrorists into the region, and beyond.
According to a senior US official, more than 100 already broke out.
None from this prison, Serhat says, although some inmates started a riot during a meal distribution a month ago, attacking guards after one prisoner drew them in by faking a health issue.
Guiding AFP journalists through the corridors of the prison, one guard is hesitant to even lift the hatch in the cell door.
‘These ones are dangerous,’ he says.
Further down, one cell is reserved for what IS propaganda used to call ‘the cubs of the caliphate’, children who were enlisted and trained as fighters.
The adult staying in the same cell is an orthopaedic surgeon who stayed in the ‘caliphate’ until it shrank to its death just over six months ago.
Some children have been repatriated but the fate of the men remains unclear.
Close to a third of the prison’s population is sick and needs treatment for a variety of wounds and conditions that include hepatitis and AIDS.
Bassem Abdel Azim, a 42-year-old Dutch-Egyptian, was wounded in an air strike and can’t use his right leg.
He recounts how he tricked his wife into travelling to the ‘caliphate’ with the promise of a holiday in Turkey.
‘I didn’t tell her, I didn’t want her to be scared,’ Abdel Azim says, explaining he has no idea where she and their five children are now.
‘I would like to see her again. They can hang me after that, I just want to tell her I’m sorry I took them in a country at war.’
Source: Daily Mail