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Kurdish authorities in northeast Syria on Sunday handed over 34 orphaned children, whose parents were suspected of belonging to ISIS, to a Russian delegation to be repatriated.
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An AFP correspondent in the city of Qamishli said the children aged between three and 14 were handed over to a delegation headed by the Russian president’s envoy for children’s rights, Anna Kuznetsova.
Moscow has now repatriated at least 169 such children, Fener al-Kait of the Syrian Kurds’ foreign affairs department told AFP on the sidelines of a handover ceremony.
He said other departures to the Russian Federation of orphaned children would follow from northeast Syria.
Moscow has also been repatriating children abandoned in Iraq since the collapse of the extremists’ self-proclaimed “caliphate” straddling both Arab states.
Syria’s Kurds have repeatedly urged the international community to repatriate foreign nationals held in crowded camps in northeast Syria.
Their calls have largely fallen on deaf ears with only limited numbers, mostly children, allowed to return home so far.
Read more:
Tracking down the orphaned children of an ISIS fighter killed in battle
Syrians reveal they were recruited into sleeper cells to target US army: Sources
Kidnapped by ISIS, brainwashed and turned into a child soldier: A Yazidi’s story
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