Seven children repatriated to Germany from North East Syria, as other states urged to follow suit

Seven children and four women from Roj camp in North East Syria were repatriated to Germany last night, in a move welcomed by Save the Children. The child rights agency is calling on other states to take similar urgent action, as some 11,000 foreign children and women remain in Roj and Al-Hol camps, where the risks to children have only become greater due to an outbreak of cholera and reports of increasing violence.

 

The move by Germany comes after reports from several other countries in recent days regarding possible repatriation of children and mothers from the camps. This is the second repatriation of German nationals from the camps this year, with the total number of children repatriated to Germany now at 76, as well as 26 women.

 

Deteriorating and life-threatening conditions mean repatriations need to be urgently sped up from Roj and Al-Hol camps, which are no place for children, Save the Children said. Only last month, a 6-year-old Russian child reportedly died after being run over by a truck in the Al Hol Annex camp, while other children recently witnessed their mother’s dead body abandoned by the side of the road as killings in the camp increased by 250% in the second quarter of this year.

 

Save the Children research from a year ago said that children left in the camps are “wasting away”, with crumbling healthcare and education services, and more than half of households in Roj being aware of child labour among children under the age of 11.

 

Beat Rohr, Syria Response Director for Save the Children said: “It’s wonderful to see Germany taking positive steps to protect children’s rights and bring their perilous stay in these camps to an end. Make no mistake, for these seven children this is a life-changing, even life-saving, decision. Other countries must follow this example and urgently bring their children home before winter comes and makes the already unbearable conditions even worse.”

 

Last month, the European Court for Human Rights ordered the French Government to review the cases of several of their citizens, including three children, stuck in camps in North East Syria. These children are yet to be brought to France. The Court’s decision and ongoing repatriations by different countries show how unsustainable and unjust the situation is, Save the Children said.

 

Equally important, durable solutions are desperately needed for thousands of Syrian children as well, who still face harsh conditions and a bleak outlook for their future in the camps.

 

 

 

Source: Save the Children