Only one Syrian camp is 140 Albanians confined

Alvin Berisha was one of the times with the happy “”. The media noise in Albania and Italy caused him to return to the family, despite problems that would accompany him for even a short while. They are language - related problems, but they are also health problems because they have been injured and the wounds are [...] according to his father, the offering.
However, there are still many Albanians who are in anxiety about returning home. Albanian authorities, though failing to give an exact figure, presumption that there are little more than 140 Albanians in total who have gone to Syria. At least 29 of them, according to information, result in deaths on the battlefront, while others expect to return to Albania.
Meanwhile, 85 children born in Syria from women with citizenship from Albania, Kosovo and Northern Macedonia are at the Al-Hol camp run by the Kurds, and they are not considered Albanian citizens, so they do not account for the total figure of those awaiting repatriation.
Lavrim Muharnier, a prominent Islamic State fighter from Kosovo who declared himself commander of Albanians fighting for the militant group in Syria and Iraq, was declared dead in 2017.
Two years later, his children in Syria bear relations with an Albanian woman from Tirana are living in a Kurdish-run camp. Both children are among at least 85 children at camp “Al Hol” of women with ethnicity from Albania, Kosovo and Northern Macedonia.
Al Hol camp has been set up in tents in the Syrian province of El-Hasakah. According to the United Nations, there are currently some 73 thousand people in it. According to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs, about 65 percent of the people in the camp are children under the age of 18 and about 27 percent are women. Internally displaced refugees and Iraqi refugees make up the majority, but about 15 percent are the so - called third countries' citizens.
Who is camp “Al-Hol” in Syria
Camp Al-Hol is a desperate, dirty, crowded and crowded place with people that nobody in the world wants. This camp in eastern Syria is now home to families of the so-called Islamic States newly arrived by Califat. It's beyond capacity and it's trying to deal with thousands of arrivals while no one leaves.
Various governments feel that it is a problem for them to do what to do with these people, but that is nothing compared to the crisis facing those who are forced to take responsibility for them. It costs a million dollars a day just food and no serious help comes from outside.
There is little food, heat or health care, but there is much anger and despair. Maintaining security is a growing challenge when at least one murder occurred and there are many fights and fights. In this desperate land of no one, some retain the structure of Caliphat, and some aim to destroy it.












