'ISIS mindset is an international problem'

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NEWS CENTER - Autonomous Administration Foreign Relations Department Member Xalid Îbrahîm stated that ISIS is an international problem and noted that the countries that accept to take their citizens only want children.
 
Xalid Îbrahîm, Member of the Foreign Relations Department of the Democratic Autonomous Administration of Northern and Eastern Syria, stated that the refugees in the Hol camp should be sent back to their countries and that the responsibility should not be placed entirely on the Autonomous Administration. Making evaluations to Fırat News Agency (ANF), Ibrahîm stated that the Autonomous Administration has fulfilled all its responsibilities in the fight against ISIS, and that the international community is also responsible for this and should act with this responsibility.
 
Xalid Îbrahîm emphasized that the fight against those who want to revive this mentality has continued since 2019, when ISIS lost its geographical dominance. Îbrahîm pointed out that there are thousands of ISIS members in prisons in Northern and Eastern Syria, and that there are thousands of ISIS families in the Hol and Roj camps.
 
Mentioning that there are people from approximately 50 countries in the Hol and Roj camps, Xalid Îbrahîm noted that the countries that agreed to take their citizens only wanted children. Expressing that the Autonomous Administration does not accept this, Xalid Ibrahîm said: "Turkey's attacks and threats against Northern and Eastern Syria, of course, both enable and encourage ISIS to organize itself as an international terrorist threat once again."
 
AANES Foreign Relations Department Member Xalid Îbrahîm
 
'ISIS PROBLEM IS AN INTERNATIONAL PROBLEM'
 
"The problem of those with the ISIS mentality is an international problem," said Xalid Ibrahîm, adding: "The people of Northern and Eastern Syria, especially the families who sacrificed their children in this war, are slowly reacting, both for the families handed over to foreign countries and for the families returning. Because many families say, 'We will not accept our children's blood being left on the ground like this.' They express that they want those who are handed over or returned to be put through the courts. Therefore, the autonomous administration, together with the international community, is searching for how to solve this problem."