The Syrian Democratic Forces expected to "evacuate" more people trapped in the last enclave of the Daqash organization in eastern Syria, following the departure of more than 2000 people, most of them from the families of the organization members. A large number of women and children, 2,500 of whom, according to the United Nations reached the camp of the Hol in the north, which is experiencing humanitarian conditions tragic and urgently needed urgent assistance.

The forces of «Qsd», consisting of Kurdish factions and Arab backed by Washington, to resolve the battle against the fighters «Daqash» trapped in an area does not exceed a half square kilometer in the town of Bagouz, The spokesman of the campaign of the Syrian Democratic Forces in Deir al-Zour Adnan Afrin, told AFP, Yesterday: "The road is open for us, and we hope that more civilians come from the pocket of the organization, but it depends on whether the fighters (Daash) will leave room for civilians to come out."

Afrin estimated that more than 2,000 men, women, children and men were released yesterday from the Baguoz, most of them from the families of the organization's members. They were taken to an area in the middle of the eastern desert of Deir al-Zour, North or detention centers.

The men, much less than women, were gathered separately as they were subjected one by one to an inspection and identity check. Some women left the ground near bags of various sizes, many screaming for water and food for the children.

The Hol camp, run by the Syrian Democratic Forces in the province of Hasaka, is crowded with 40,000 people, according to the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs (OCHA), which expected thousands more in the coming hours and days to put additional pressure on key services. .

"This sudden influx represents a huge challenge for the response," the office said in Twitter tweets, stressing the urgent need for additional tents, non-food items, water, sanitation and cleaning materials.

On the other hand, those trapped in the enclave also face miserable conditions, in the absence of food, water and medicine. They arrive at the camp after a dangerous and deplorable journey. Since last December, the United Nations has reported the deaths of 60 children Syria or after their arrival in the camp, while the International Rescue Committee, which has its staff inside the camp, said the number had risen to at least 69, two-thirds of children under the age of the year.

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