After helping to defeat the Islamic State in Syria, the U.S.-backed Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) were put in charge of guarding Islamic State fighters — many of them foreigners to Syria — and their wives and children, with tens of thousands of fighters, women and children stuck in prisons or camps across northeastern Syria, U.S. officials said.For months, the U.S. has been urging countries, especially its Western allies, to take back and prosecute citizens who left to fight with IS, also known as ISIS or Daesh. They have also called up upon them to repatriate family members who traveled to or were born into the terror group’s self-declared caliphate.  But those calls have largely gone unheeded.President Donald Trump’s announcement Monday of a U.S. withdrawal from northern Syria, paving the way for a Turkish military operation against a Kurdish militia in the area, leaves unanswered what will happen to those imprisoned fighters and their families.Here are the numbers of fighters and their family members believed held in northeastern Syria:11,000: Total estimated fighters in Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) custody, in more than 30 makeshift prisons, such as converted schools and hospitals, per U.S. officials.More than 2,000: Total estimated foreign fighters in SDF custody, according to the U.S.More than 2,200: Total estimated foreign fighters in SDF custody, according to the Syrian Democratic Council.73,000: Total estimated IS relatives/family members in displaced person camps, per U.S. officials.About 100,000: Total estimated number of displaced people in camps across northeastern Syria, according to the Norwegian Refugee Council.

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