“Does our government hate us? Why are they not doing anything?”
Raheema Khan, the sister of a woman being detained in a Syrian camp, said her sister sent her this heartbreaking message recently.
Khan was speaking to the media following the launch of the human rights organisation Human Rights Watch’s (HRW) report Trinidad and Tobago: Bring Home Nationals From Northeast Syria at the Kapok Hotel, Port of Spain, on Tuesday.
She knocked the Government for the snail’s pace at which it was moving to repatriate TT nationals from camps in Syria where 21 women, 56 children, and 13 men and boys are being held in dire conditions. She said she was happy the international organisation was putting pressure on the Government to move quickly.
“The government has been telling the media and us that they need to verify that these are our citizens and they are working on legislation. In four years: haven’t you verified, haven’t you done anything? If I as a family member can contact the International Red Cross and I got a letter stating that my sister is well and in the camps in Syria, and I gave that to you – the Government – why can’t you talk to all these other international organisations to verify our citizens there?
“The US is willing to assist the TT government in any way to verify the citizens there and even bring them home. Our government has been refusing, as far as I’m concerned, all assistance. The UN wrote the government a letter telling them they have citizens in these camps and children suffering in inhumane conditions, and the government ignored them. The officials running the camps have contacted the government, and they never got a response.”
Khan said she had six nieces and nephews in the camps, and they were depressed and sick.
She said her sister sent a message, “Why isn’t our government doing anything? Our government just hates us. Because if the Barbadian government can bring the Bajan woman home, does that mean the TT government hates us? They don’t want us back?”
She said the families of the refugees were scared that the older boys would be taken from their mothers and sent to detention centres.
“The guards have told the Trinidadian mothers, we are coming for your sons and they are carrying them to prison, at 12 years old. So these mothers are scared, they are trying to hide their sons so the guards don’t grab them. Because once these boys leave, the mothers have no contact with them anymore. So we’re running out of time.”
Khan said the families were willing to send a team to assist with verification and said government had ignored verification documents provided.
“We provided them, my sister took out pictures of her and her kids, in the camp since 2019, you could see the tent and the UNHCR stamp on the tent. We provided pictures of all these women and children, birth certificates, ID cards, passports, marriage certificates, everything. We have a whole verification folder, we gave that to the Government – the National Security