Repatriation is directly oppositional to the effort to oppress any migration into ISIS in it's height of it's deadly campaigns. Perhaps the success of repatriation relies on a recertification of citizenship, including, proof of denouncing the schism of ISIS.
Citizenship can demand a repatriation education including trade training to provide independence and away from dependency. Repatriating children always holds the prospect of temporary citizen parents while parents complete proof of denouncing the schism away from Mohammad into a strange and violent form of a religion alien to religious leaders.
By Charlie Savage
Al Hol, Syria — Viewed from a helicopter, (click here) this enormous camp that holds the wives and children of dead or captured Islamic State fighters was a sea of white tents against the desolate landscape of drought-stricken northeastern Syria.
From the ground, the human dimension of this tragedy came into focus. As a convoy of armored vehicles made its way up a dusty road, children emerged to stand at the fence amid garbage. Some waved. One boy, in a faded “Star Wars” shirt, stood with hands clasped behind his back. Another, in an oversize polo shirt, held aloft a star folded from paper.
Al Hol is a detention camp for people displaced by the ISIS war — guards do not let residents walk out its gates. About 93 percent of the 55,000 people here are women and children, about half under 12 years old. While most have Iraqi or Syrian mothers, thousands come from about 51 other countries, including European nations that have been reluctant to repatriate them....