Barbed wire and armed guards testify that we are in a prison camp.

"Amina" is one of about ten Swedish women living in the Roj camp.

- We know that three women traveled with their children on Sunday, but we do not know what is happening now.

There are different rumors, she says.

Amina, whose real name is something else, tells SVT that she traveled to IS to live with her husband who was already there.

"Takes full responsibility for my actions"

She left Sweden for the terrorist sect after the genocide of Yazidis but says that she neither knew about it nor had seen the terror sect's propaganda.

- If I had known what I know today, I would not have gone.

I regret it, and I distance myself from IS ideology, she says.

Many people see you as a security risk in Sweden, how do you see it?

- It is good to investigate those who have returned to Sweden.

You should do that.

I take full responsibility for all my actions and I know the consequences of coming here, she says.

Wants more people to be deported

Today, there are about ten Swedish women and their children in Rojlägret.

Amina hopes that the women who remain will be deported to Sweden.

But you left your country to join a terrorist group, why should you come back?

- I think those who came here did so for various reasons.

Was it right of me to come here?

No, that's something I regret.

A total of 11,000 foreign nationals from some fifty countries live in the camps for IS families in Kurdish autonomy in northern Syria.