The spokesman of the Secretary-General of the Arab League, Ambassador Mahmoud Afifi, said yesterday that the return of Syria to the university "not listed until now" on the agenda of the Arab summit to be held in Tunisia, the end of March, and at the time surrendered fighters from the " Of the tunnels in the Syrian Bagouz, Syrian Kurds warned, after the celebration of the end of the organization «Daash», that thousands of foreign fighters detained by their forces constitute a «danger» continues, calling on the international community to intervene to return them to their countries.

"To date, the issue of the return of Syria is not on the agenda and has not been formally proposed by any party," Afifi told a news conference.

The Secretary-General of the Arab League, Ahmed Abul-Gheit, announced on the sixth of this month, at the end of the fifteenth session of the Ministerial Council of the Arab League in Cairo, that the subject of Syria's potential participation in the upcoming Arab summit in Tunisia "was not put at all" during the meetings.

On November 12, 2011, about eight months after the start of the unrest in Syria, the Arab League decided to suspend Syria's membership with political and economic sanctions on Damascus, demanding that the Syrian army "not use violence against anti-regime demonstrators."

Tunisia, the host country of the summit, supports Syria's return to the university. In January, Tunisian Foreign Minister Khamis al-Jahnawi said that Syria's "natural place" was within the League of Arab States.

There is debate over the return of Syria, especially with the strengthening of the Damascus authorities, and the military victories of the Syrian army, which was able to recover large areas of armed extremists and opponents, with the support of his allies, Russia and Iran.

He called on Iraq and Lebanon to return Syria to the Arab League, and the UAE, in December 2018, reopened its embassy in Damascus, after the severance of diplomatic relations since 2012.

"There is no Arab consensus on the issue of reviewing the decision to suspend Syria's membership in the Arab League," Assistant Secretary-General Hossam Zaki told a press conference at the end of January.

On the Syrian Golan, Afifi stressed yesterday that "Arab summits always emphasize in their resolutions the Arabization of the occupied Syrian Golan."

The comments came in response to journalists' questions about the announcement by US President Donald Trump last Thursday in a tweet on Twitter that it was time to recognize Israel's sovereignty over the Golan Heights.

Trump's statement is a break with US policy in decades in the Middle East, and with a longstanding international consensus.

"It is possible, in the light of the recent development, that an Arab state will request a new addition to the draft resolution on the Golan, based on what is new," Afifi said.

The Arab League and Arab countries condemned the Trump declaration, asserting that "the Golan is occupied Syrian territory."

"The Syrian crisis is on the agenda of the summit with other issues, notably the Palestinian issue, the situation in Libya and Yemen, support for peace and development in Sudan, Iranian interference in the affairs of Arab countries, Turkish intervention in northern Iraq and the Iranian occupation of the UAE islands," Afifi said.

He said that there was an item on the displaced in the Arab countries, especially the Iraqis, was included at the request of Iraq.

On the other hand, the Kurds of Syria, yesterday, after the celebration of the end of «urging», that thousands of foreign fighters detained by their forces, constitute a «danger» continues.

The head of the Office of Foreign Relations in Kurdish self-management in Syria, Abdul Karim Omar, told Agence France-Presse: "We have spent a state of preaching and this is a very great achievement, but it does not mean that we have spent a cheerleader."

"We have thousands of fighters, as well as children and women from 54 countries, except the Syrians and the Iraqis, and this is a great burden and a danger to us and to the entire international community," he said.

According to Save the Children, more than 3,500 foreign children from more than 30 countries are in the three camps in northeastern Syria.

Omar warned of the "thousands of children who were brought up in a mindset" in the camps for the displaced. "If they are not rehabilitated and therefore integrated into their communities of origin, they are all terrorist projects," he said.

"Any threat or any new war would be an opportunity for the organization's fighters to escape from the prisons," Omar said. "There must be coordination between us and the international community to confront this threat."

This came at a time of fighters from the organization themselves, yesterday, to the Syrian Democratic forces in the town of Baguoz, after they were out of the tunnels were hiding inside, according to a Kurdish spokesman.

A journalist at Agence France-Presse saw scores of men standing in a regular row, some of whom had their beards, before boarding trucks. The Kurdish spokesman in the ranks of the Syrian Democratic Forces, Jiacher said, "They are fighters who came out of the tunnels and gave themselves up" without specifying the number.

The Kurds fear Turkey's continuing threats to launch a new offensive against their fighters, whom they consider "terrorists" and fear their links with Kurdish rebels on its soil.

The US presence so far calms Ankara's push against Kurdish militants and prevents Damascus from launching an offensive to regain control of their territory.

The commander-in-chief of the Syrian Democratic Forces, Mazloum Kubani, told a press conference in the oil field: «start a new phase» of the battle against the organization to eliminate the «sleeping cells». "The campaign is not over yet," he said, adding that it would be "coordinated with coalition forces."

The coalition commander, Gen. Paul Lacamira, said in a statement yesterday that "the fight against the extremist and extremist violence will not end soon." He said in a statement, "Do not rest assured, urging keep its forces, they made decisions by calculating the remaining forces and abilities to try their luck In camps for the displaced, and by going to remote areas, they are waiting for the right time to move again ».

US Secretary of State Mike Pompeo welcomed last night the elimination of a "preacher," stressing that there is still "much work to do to eliminate the threat of terrorism of Islamic extremism."

"The land that was once controlled by a pro-Iraqi organization in Iraq and Syria has been liberated," Pompeo said in a tweet on Twitter. "We congratulate the US Army, the Syrian Democratic Forces and the Alliance for this amazing success."

"There is still a lot of work to be done to ensure a complete and complete elimination of the threat of terrorism of Islamic extremism," he said.