Sudden closure of Al Hol camp leaves thousands without healthcare or protection
Amsterdam–Hassakeh, 27 February 2026 – Médecins sans Frontières (MSF) is concerned by the abrupt and uncoordinated way in which Al Hol detention camp was closed by the Syrian government. The sudden closure of the camp on 22 February, and the chaos that preceded it, exposed thousands of people — including children and individuals with chronic medical conditions — to increased protection risks and reduced access to healthcare.
At its peak in 2019, more than 76,000 people were detained at Al Hol, the majority of whom were women and children. The camp was divided, with Syrian and Iraqi nationals held in one area and nationals of other countries detained in a segregated section. By January 2026, the population had reportedly fallen to around 23,000 following multiple repatriation trips, particularly to Iraq. When control of the camp shifted from the Syrian Democratic Forces to the Government of Syria, the camp population sharply declined amid a period of transition and insecurity, including reports of people escaping and being smuggled out. In the week leading up to the closure, remaining residents were relocated to Aq Burhan camp in Akhtarin, northern Aleppo, while some families returned directly to their areas of origin.
Gaps in healthcare, protection and assistance have been reported in Aq Burhan camp. MSF is particularly concerned that women and children face heightened risks of violence, exploitation, and further displacement following this haphazard relocation process.
As people left Al Hol, emotions were mixed. “Some were relieved, some were confused, and some were angry they were going to another camp instead of home — but almost everyone was carrying years of exhaustion,” said Barbara Hessel, Head of MSF programmes in northeast Syria. One resident told MSF that he hoped the new camp would at least have trees and some green space, as Al Hol had felt like “a dead place”.
During its years of presence in Al Hol, MSF directly witnessed and documented neglect and violence imposed on the camp’s residents. People, including children, were consistently treated as a security threat rather than as individuals with rights and needs. For some, their time in the camp involved a history of coercion, exploitation, and abuse, reflecting a far more complex reality than is often acknowledged.
“For seven years, the international community has participated in and maintained a system of indefinite confinement in the desert of northeast Syria, justified in the name of security,” said Stephen MacKay, Operations Manager responsible for MSF programmes in Syria. “The sudden closure of the camp, without a clear, rights based plan for residents’ future, underlines the arbitrary nature of both their prolonged detention and their release. It also underscores the sustained failure over the past seven years to meet their basic humanitarian needs or to resolve their legal limbo.”
MSF calls on Syrian authorities and international actors to ensure uninterrupted access to essential healthcare for all people relocated from Al Hol camp, including continuity of care for noncommunicable diseases. MSF also urges the authorities to uphold their commitment to provide legal documentation for Syrian nationals, enabling people to rebuild their lives.
MSF is concerned about the fate of the foreign nationals who previously resided in Al Hol and many of whom had been treated by MSF medical teams. The organisation calls on all concerned governments to strengthen protection measures, particularly for women and children, to safeguard them from violence, exploitation, and abuse, and to facilitate their voluntary repatriation.