Officials from the Federation of North and East Syria handed over three children born into ISIS to Nigerian government officials. The three siblings, a girl and two boys, are aged between 5 and 10. They are reported to have lost their mother and father.

An official from the Nigerian government stated that they were also examining the possible return of other children with Nigerian roots.

According to the Federation of North and East Syria, there are as many as 12,000 foreigners currently staying in the camps built in the region. These include 4 thousand are women and 8 thousand children from 30 to 40 countries. Separately, hundreds of foreign mercenaries are under arrest in northeast Syria.

The Federation has repeatedly called upon foreign countries, Europe in the first place, to take back their citizens who were engaged in ISIS. Another call of the Federation is the establishment of an international court in the region to put the criminal terrorists on trial.

In recent months, several foreign women and children within ISIS have been transferred to their countries of origin.

Four ISIS orphans were handed over to Germany in August, six to Belgium and 12 to France in June. 5 other children had been sent to France in March.

In late May, 148 women and children of ISIS members were returned to Uzbekistan.

The Autonomous Administration Foreign Relations Bureau has handed over 5 children to Norwegian government authorities on 3 June.

The autonomous administration of northern and eastern Syria handed over two women and six children with US citizenship to the United States at the beginning of June. The repatriation of women and children from the battered "Islamic State" had come at the request of the US.

In late June, Denmark retrieved a twelve-year-old child whose parents are imprisoned in Rojava and who are members of the Islamic State (ISIS) jihadist militia and have Danish citizenship.

The Sudan took back two women and some of their children. Kazakhstan took back 5 gang members, 11 women and 3 children.