facebooktwittertelegramwhatsapp
copy short urlprintemail
+ A
A -
webmaster
AFP
Beirut
Kurdish-led security forces said they restored calm on Monday at a prison in northeast Syria after a riot by Islamic State group inmates.
The Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said four detainees believed to have broken out of Ghourian prison in the town of Hasakeh had been tracked down within the jail.
Some 5,000 IS suspects are held in the jail run by the Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF), according to the Observatory.
On Sunday, prisoners managed to dismantle cell doors and pierce through dormitory walls, overrunning the jail’s ground floor, the SDF said.
“The situation in the prison is totally back under control,” the SDF said Monday in a statement.
Anti-jihadist forces linked to the SDF had “intervened directly, ending the riot and securing” the facility.
The statement said “no escape had occurred”, refuting earlier reports.
IS jihadists overran large parts of Syria and neighbouring Iraq in 2014, imposing their brutal rule over millions.
But various military offensives slowly whittled down their territorial “caliphate”, wiping it out a year ago.
Syria’s Kurds hold some 12,000 suspected jihadists in several prisons across the northeast of the country.
They are mostly Syrians and Iraqis but also 2,500 to 3,000 foreigners from dozens of foreign countries.
Kurdish authorities called for foreign countries to repatriate their nationals accused of belonging to IS, but these have been largely reluctant.
Instead the Kurds are now urging the international community to help better secure their jails and organise trials of IS-linked detainees on their own soil.
copy short url   Copy
31/03/2020
103