During the civil war, al-Hawl was seized by Islamic State forces, becoming one of the major IS strongholds in northeastern Syria. On 13 November 2015, al-Hawl was captured by the SDF, in what was considered as the first strategic success by the newly established SDF.[2]
Infrastructure
North of the town is a significant road junction connecting the provincial capital with the Iraqi border. While the northeastern branch proceeds towards Tall Hamis and the Rabia border crossing, the southeastern branch towards the Sinjar mountains passes through the town southeastwards, reaching the Makhfar Umm Jaris border crossing after some 20 kilometres (12 mi).
The town is surrounded by disused military bases formerly used by the Syrian Army and abandoned in February 2013.
In early 1991, during the Gulf War, the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees established a refugee camp in the southern outskirts of al-Hawl, which was operated in cooperation with the Syrian government.[3] Along with another camp in al-Hasakah, it provided shelter to at least 15,000 refugees from Iraq.[4] Following the 2003 invasion of Iraq and the subsequent Iraq War, the camp was later reopened as one of three camps at the Iraqi–Syrian border, when an exodus of Palestinian refugees living in Iraq occurred due to persecution by the newly-installed Iraqi government.[5]
In the context of the civil war and the takeover of al-Hawl by the Syrian Democratic Forces, the al-Hawl camp has come to be inhabited by more than 60,000 refugees as of February 2021.[6] More than 40,000 of these people arrived after December 2018 in a series of massive civilian evacuations from the town of Baghuz Fawqani, fleeing the fierce two-month battle for the town between the SDF and IS. Conditions along the road to the camp, including in screening centers for IS operatives, have been described as "extremely harsh" with limited food, water, shelter and no health services. Aid organizations feared dysentery and other diseases could break out from the overflow camp. The UN stated that 84 people, mostly children, died on the way to al-Hawl from December 2018 to March 2019,[7] mostly due to hypothermia. Around 500 families in the camp are family members of IS fighters, including a large number of foreign nationals. They are however kept in a separate guarded section of the camp after repeated violent incidents between them and other members of the camp.[8][9]
During January and February 2021, 21 people were killed by cells of the Islamic State which was more than triple the number of people killed in recent months in what the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights described as the "Al-Hawl mini-state."[6][10]
Civil war
In the course of the Eastern al-Hasakah offensive of Syrian Kurdish YPG, Islamic State militants were expelled from large swaths of eastern Hasakah, including Tell Hamis and Tell Brak. The southeastern Hasakah countryside around al-Hawl however remained one of the last IS strongholds in the province.
When in October 2015, the KurdishYPG militia and their partners, including the Sunni Arab Shammar tribe's al-Sanadid Forces, joined forces to form the SDF, al-Sanadid leader Bandar al-Humaydi made it an "immediate priority to liberate al-Hawl and Ash Shaddadi from the Islamic State.”[11]
In late October 2015, following the successful Battle of Hasakah, the SDF launched their al-Hawl offensive slowly advancing southwards from Tell Hamis. On 11 November they seized Khatuniyah and moved on around the lake further southwards to surround al-Hawl from both northeast and south on 12 November.[12] On 13 November, al-Hawl was captured, in what was considered the SDF's first strategic success.[2] In the following days, the SDF advanced further westwards to close the remaining ISIL-held pocket around the villages of Abu Hajirat Khuatana and Khuwaytilah.[13]
Geography
The town is located some 40 kilometres (25 mi) east of al-Hasakah, on the southern bank of the dried-out wadi‘Aţā Allāh. While the wadi has dried out, the spring ‘Ayn al-Hawl, located south of the town, still carries water. Nearby villages include Sheikh Ma'ad with the Sheikh Ma‘ad shrine to the north, just across the wadi.
^"At least 84 die fleeing Daesh in Deir Ezzor in east Syria: UN". Arab News. Geneva. 1 March 2019. Retrieved 13 March 2019. At least 84 people, two thirds of them children, have died since December on their way to Al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria after fleeing Daesh in the Deir Ezzor region, the United Nations said on Friday.
^
Romeo Langlois, James Andre (8 February 2019). "FRANCE 24 exclusive: The battle-hardened foreign jihadi brides trapped in Syria". France 24. Retrieved 13 March 2019. Almost all of the women in the Kurdish-controlled al-Hol camp in northeastern Syria are foreign nationals who travelled to Syria at the height of the IS group's so-called caliphate. They are held in a fenced-off area away from the other camp residents.