ALBAWABA - Two bodies were found in Syria's Al Hol Camp, Tuesday and belonged to young Egyptian girls aged 11 and 13 with their heads severed. This is being reported all over the social media.
Two Egyptian girls found dead at Syria camp hosting ISIL families
— jenny legall (@legall_jenny) November 16, 2022
The bodies of the beheaded girls were found in sewage waters at al-Hol detention camp in northeastern Syria, officials say. pic.twitter.com/rWzVRSocVS
The United Nations is incensed at the latest horrible murders. The UN's deputy spokesperson Farhan Haq put it this way: ''We've been drawing attention to the poor conditions at the Al‑Hol camp for some time now, and this is another extremely sad reminder of how bad the conditions are.''
The dead bodies of two Egyptian minors were discovered on Tuesday in a camp housing families with links to the Islamic State (ISIS) in northeast Syria (Rojava), a war monitor reported, adding that the victims had been beheaded.https://t.co/dI6gMh4IMl
— Rudaw English (@RudawEnglish) November 16, 2022
In reference to the murders he added these need ''...to be thoroughly condemned and thoroughly investigated.'' The beheaded bodies were found in the sewage system of the camp that houses thousands of women and children of ISIS suspects.
The beheaded bodies of two #Egyptian girls found in a sprawling camp in #Syria housing tens of thousands of #women and children linked to the Daesh grouphttps://t.co/zyb2petHqj
— Arab News (@arabnews) November 15, 2022
The camp is run by the Kurdish Syrian Democratic Forces that is supported by the United States with the latest murders being reported by the Syrian Human Rights Observatory with many hashtags on the social media.
The Al-Hol camp houses 55,000 suspected Daesh/ISIS members and their families from Syria, Iraq and 60 other countries with more than half of the residents being children. Some countries, including Türkiye, Russia and Kazakhstan have repatriated citizens but Western nations have shown a reluctance to address the situation Anadolu reports.