(REUTERS/Rodi Said)A Kurdish fighter from the People's Protection Units (YPG) carries his weapon as he walks at the faculty of economics where a defaced picture of Syrian President Bashar al-Assad is seen in the background, in the Ghwairan neighborhood of Hasaka, Syria, August 22, 2016.

The villages previously inhabited by Assyrian Christians in north eastern Syria has been freed from ISIS but the Assyrians still cannot return home because the region is now under the control of Kurdish militia.

The Khabour River region was first attacked by ISIS in February 2015 affecting 35 Assyrian villages. Over 200 Assyrians were abducted but most of them were released after a ransom was paid.

According to World Watch Monitor, villages such as Tel Nasri and Tel Goran have been occupied by the Kurdish YPG militia (Yekîneyên Parastina Gel‎ or People's Defense Units) since 2015. It was initially believed that the militia was only there temporarily to train its forces and to prevent ISIS from retaking the villages.

Assyria TV has reported that the most affected village in the region was Abutina. Assyrian homes were reportedly destroyed by bombs and explosions from the YPG training.

The militia has allegedly been putting up warning signs in different parts of the village to scare away the Assyrians. It was also reported that the villages have been systematically looted by Kurdish groups.

Last month, Archbishop Jacques Behnan Hindo of the Syriac Catholic Church told Agenzia Fides that acts of violence are being carried out against Christians in the city of Hassake. He believed the acts were part of a strategy to expel the remaining Christians from the city.

"Whenever the Kurdish militia enter in action to reaffirm its military hegemony over the city, the epicenter of their raids and acts of force is always the area of the six churches, where most of the Christians live," said Hindo. "In many cases they expelled the Christians from their homes under the threat of Kalashnikovs. And where they enter, they loot everything," Hindo added.

Hindo said that he himself was a victim of intimidation when his house was fired upon. He suspected the Kurdish militias in the area because according to him, there were no other armed groups nearby.

"For sure, these shots were not fired by jihadists, whose closest bases were located more than twenty kilometers away," he added.