al-Hollägret has been described as hell - an outdoor prison for families suspected of being linked to the terrorist group Islamic State, IS. An estimated 68,000 people are in the al-Hollägret, according to the Red Cross.

About 60-70 children with Swedish parents are estimated to be in some of the camps where IS supporters are held.

In Sweden, no official decisions have yet been made on whether or not these children should be taken to Sweden.

Foreign Minister Ann Linde (S) has previously said that she mainly focuses on the children whose parents are no longer alive. So far, seven orphans have been taken home and, according to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs, fewer than five orphans are left.

"There is hope to get them home, but it is impossible to answer when," writes the Foreign Ministry's press department in an email to SVT News.

Finland decides on a case-by-case basis

The government parties in Finland agreed on Monday that they should try to bring home the Finnish children from the camp in al-Hol as soon as possible.

There are about 30 children, Reuters writes. According to Finnish Prime Minister Sanna Marin, decisions about the children will be made on a case-by-case basis, where the best interests of the child will be taken into account, writes Swedish Yle.

However, Finland will not help the adults who have traveled to Syria.

Norway helps children but not adults

Also in Norway it has been decided that the children who are in these camps should be taken home and so far five orphans have been evacuated from al-Hollägret. Three of them are born in Norway, says NRK.

But there are another 35 children with Norwegian connection, and like many other European countries, you do not feel obliged to take home the parents, usually mothers. Save the children, however, have urged countries that these women should also be allowed to return so that they can be brought to justice in their respective countries, writes Aftenposten.

Denmark does not take home more children

Last month, Danish authorities reunited an 11-month-old boy with his Danish relatives. The mother was killed in a bombing and even the father is believed to be dead, writes DR.

This summer, for the first time, Denmark evacuated a teenage boy from the al-Hol camp. Unlike the aforementioned children, the boy's mother was alive, but because he was severely injured, the mother allowed him to be transported outside Syria so that he could receive care even further into Denmark, the DR reported in June this year.

But it is estimated there are another 40 children whose parents are Danish citizens. Prime Minister Mette Fredriksen said at the end of November that he did not want to take any more children home.

"We, as a government, have made the decision that we do not take the children to Denmark because their parents have turned Denmark back and fought for IS and thus they have made a choice on their children's behalf," said Mette Fredriksen according to the Danish news agency Ritzau.