
Deal reached for twice-monthly return of Iraqi families from al-Hol camp
Iraq and the Kurdish-run autonomous administration in northeast Syria have agreed to resume the return for Iraqis at al-Hol camp, scheduling two voluntary trips each month, a source familiar with the process informed Shafaq News on Sunday.
The agreement forms part of a coordinated effort to accelerate the evacuation of Iraqi nationals from al-Hol camp, located in Syria's al-Hasakah province, and to streamline their transfer based on organized schedules and official name lists, the source explained, adding that the camp's authorities finalized the list for an upcoming trip earlier this month, and are currently awaiting confirmation from the Iraqi side regarding the departure date.
The timing and frequency of the return journeys hinge largely on Iraq's logistical readiness at Jadaa camp in Nineveh province, the designated reception and reintegration site for returnees, the source explained.
While some trips have recently faced delays due to mounting pressure on Jadaa's capacity, the source indicated that a new convoy is expected to head toward Iraq later this week.
On June 22, the largest single group of Iraqi returnees to date—935 individuals from 236 families—departed al-Hol for Iraq. This movement followed a series of earlier returns over the past year, including 223 families (832 people) last year and 241 families (865 people) in mid-April 2024.
Earlier, Ali Abbas, spokesperson for Iraq's Ministry of Migration and Displacement, confirmed that approximately 16,000 Iraqi citizens have been repatriated from al-Hol since the process began, distributed across 28 organized convoys.
He added that about 15,000 Iraqis remain in the camp, with additional groups expected to return in the coming days. Revealing an agreement between the Iraqi government and the United Nations to complete the repatriation of all Iraqi families from al-Hol by the end of 2027, Abbas ensured that no Iraqis would remain in the camp beyond that deadline.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


Shafaq News
39 minutes ago
- Shafaq News
Israel hits Syrian sites in Golan
Shafaq News – Middle East Israel's military announced, on Sunday, destroying several sites belonging to the former Syrian regime in the Golan Heights, which remains internationally recognized as occupied Syrian territory. Army spokesperson Avichay Adraee said on X that Israeli forces had advanced into Mount Hermon and operated inside Syrian territory, dismantling multiple outposts near the summit. He described them as 'forward contact points' that threatened Israeli positions in the Hermon sector, framing the strikes as 'preemptive.' #فيديو قوات لواء الجبال (810) تواصل أنشطتها في منطقة جنوب سوريا وتدمر عدة مواقع أمامية لجيش النظام السوري المخلوع في قمة جبل الشيخ ⭕️تواصل قوات اللواء 810، تحت قيادة الفرقة 210، نشاطها الموجه بالدقة داخل الأراضي السورية.⭕️خلال إحدى النشاطات، قامت قوات كتيبة الاحتياط التابعة… — افيخاي ادرعي (@AvichayAdraee) July 6, 2025 This is not Israel's first incursion into southern Syria this year. In March, troops entered the buffer zone after clashes with militants, and in April, a deeper raid inflicted unspecified casualties near Nawa, according to Syria's state media, though normalization between the two sides is reportedly on the horizon.


Shafaq News
39 minutes ago
- Shafaq News
$250M monthly oil trade: Kurdistan pushes for federal revenue deal
Shafaq News – Al-Sulaymaniyah Kurdistan's domestic trade in oil products is valued at approximately $250M per month, a senior Kurdish official said on Sunday, urging Baghdad to finalize a revenue-sharing mechanism to resolve longstanding salary disputes. Ali Hama Saleh, rapporteur of the National Stance Movement in Kurdistan, proposed that the federal government pay $16 per barrel to companies operating in the Region. "Federal authorities have expressed readiness to provide Kurdistan with refined fuels, including gasoline, under the same conditions as other provinces," he claimed, describing the move a 'golden opportunity' to guarantee public-sector salary payments. In response, the Kurdistan Regional Government is pushing to retain 100,000 barrels per day to meet local demand and integrate more closely into Iraq's national fuel supply chain. Last week, the KRG renewed calls for Baghdad to release public salaries, accusing the federal government of maintaining a 'policy of deprivation' despite regional compliance with national directives. Baghdad and Erbil have long been at odds over oil revenue management. While the Kurdistan Region previously exported crude independently, recent legal and financial pressures have pushed it to coordinate more closely with the federal government, particularly through Iraq's state-run oil marketing company, SOMO.


Shafaq News
39 minutes ago
- Shafaq News
Gaza factions vow to eliminate Abu Shabab's unit
Shafaq News – Gaza On Sunday, armed Palestinian groups branded Yasser Abu Shabab and his fighters as 'legitimate targets,' accusing them of working with Israeli forces east of Rafah in southern Gaza. The Joint Operations Room of the Palestinian Factions — a coalition of Gaza's militant wings — denounced Abu Shabab's unit, which operates under the Palestinian Authority, as 'traitors' who had abandoned their identity, vowing to eliminate any collaborators. According to the factions, fighters under Abu Shabab were organized, armed, and directed by Israel with political support, serving to shield Israeli troops and achieve goals that had failed after nearly 20 months of war. Earlier today, Abu Shabab justified his alliance with Israel in an interview on Israel's Kan Radio, confirming his fighters had received weapons to battle Hamas. 'We have tasted the bitterness of Hamas's oppression, and we took it upon ourselves to resist this aggression,' he declared, insisting his group was armed, actively training, and ready to confront Hamas 'at any cost.'