Jihad's Endless Road, Trapped In Syria's Camps
Five years after the defeat of the Islamic State, 70,000 men, women and children from around the world are still detained by the Kurds in northeastern Syria. The security situation in the camps where women and children are held is dire. Some European countries have repatriated a trickle of their nationals. The others languish in overcrowded prisons where tuberculosis is rampant. Many underage boys are arbitrarily imprisoned there, torn from their mothers' arms. We tracked down three Swiss jihadists, and a mother whose daughter has just turned seven. What are their detention conditions? Why have they not been tried? To what extent can a state violate human rights in the name of the fight against terrorism?
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