Al-Jada'a camp documenting the daily lives of returnees from Al-Hol

Local
  • 17-06-2021, 21:08
  • +A -A

    Nineveh - INA - Fatima Rahma

    The reporter of the Iraqi News Agency (INA) documented the daily lives of 94 Iraqi families who were recently transferred from the Syrian Al-Hol camp to Al-Jada'a camp in Nineveh.

    Al-Jadaa camp, which includes 398 people, the majority of whom are women and children, suffers from a severe lack of services.
    Pictures documented by the correspondent of the Iraqi News Agency, while touring with a delegation from the Ministry of Migration and Displacement headed by Undersecretary Karim Al-Nouri, showed the humanitarian situation experienced by families, as well as the needs that need to be provided, which the Ministry of Migration promised to secure.
    The Undersecretary of the Ministry, Karim Al-Nouri, told the Iraqi News Agency (INA), that "the families that were transferred from Al-Hol camp to Al-Jada'a in Nineveh are security-checked and there are no security or judicial suspicions against them," noting that "the remaining 400 families in Al-Hol camp have been checked for security and will be completed." 

    Al-Nouri explained that "medical committees and health teams are working in Al-Jada'a camp to prevent infection with the Corona virus," noting that "a case of a recent birth that occurred in Al-Jada'a camp was treated."
    And he stated that "the visit to Al-Jada'a camp reflected multiple factors, including the ability to rehabilitate, especially since they are innocent children, and there are desires for confrontation and the desire to return to their homes, especially since they previously suffered from bad treatment in Al-Hol camp."
    INA correspondent says that "there are international humanitarian organizations working to rehabilitate the families returning from al-Hol camp and work on inventorying the tents and learning about the problems faced by the displaced."