"Some foreign women from Da'ash tried to attack others who they consider" infidels "in an attempt to impose their extremist views on them, despite the organization's imminent defeat on the ground, Reuters reported. 

"He screams at us that we are infidels because we do not cover our faces ... they tried to hit us," the agency quoted Syria as saying in the Al-Hol refugee camp, where women and children were taken from the last pocket of Daqash in eastern Syria. 

In the wake of repeated quarrels and disagreements between the women of "Da'sh" on Friday, the Syrian forces surrounded the democratic control of the camp foreign women gathered women wearing black clothes behind a fence closed the gate.




"Foreign women are throwing stones, hurting Syrians or Iraqi women and camp officials, even children are directing threats," said a security official at the camp. 

Some camp guards even fired into the air to disperse a few quarrels and used an electric shock once to take control of a foreign detainee held by Syria in the camp. 

Some women who have come out of the Baguoz in recent weeks have expressed strong sympathy for the organization. 

The tension in the camp reflects a long-standing dispute between extremists who have traveled to Syria to join the so-called "immigrants" and locals who joined or lived under the regime. 

"We have had problems with some people," said a 30-year-old Turkistan woman. "Her entire family came with her to Syria to escape repression in their own country."

"We wanted to live under the Caliphate," she said. Her mother, father and brothers came to Syria with her. 

"Migrant women put them in an isolated section to avoid any problems they had with displaced people and refugees," said one camp worker. "There are problems between some of them in which there are a lot of skirmishes between them that cause trouble for some." 

It seems that the women of "Dahesh" not only internal quarrels, they also drowned some of the journalists who were in the vicinity of the camp, or those who intended convoys of exiles when they arrived in Syria's democratic camps bottled water. 

In recent days, the Hull camp has received large numbers of Baguoz exiles. The United Nations has warned that at least 62,000 people have so far poured into the camp, far more than its absorptive capacity, adding that more than 90 percent of new arrivals are women And children.