Two Canadian women who had been held captive in a prison camp in northeastern Syria, were arrested upon their return to Canada and are expected to face a bail hearing in a court in Brampton, Ontario. The Royal Canadian Mounted Police (RCMP) is seeking a terrorism peace bond against them under the Canadian Criminal Code. The two women, along with 10 children, were part of a group of four Canadian women who were repatriated from the al-Roj prison camp, which primarily holds women and children who were detained after the defeat of the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) in 2019. The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces now control the region that contains the al-Roj prison camp, and almost 10,000 detainees – mostly foreign nationals from more than 60 countries – are being held there. The Kurds have repeatedly requested that the countries to which these detainees belong repatriate them. Among the group of female detainees who were repatriated to Canada, another woman who was arrested on terror-related charges, was released on bail pending a terrorism peace bond application in Edmonton. Such an application can result in the defendant being ordered by a judge to comply with stipulations including curfew or risk a prison sentence.