- At least 11 British women have been identified as linked to ISIS fighters
- They post online about their life to tempt other would-be jihadis to go
- One, Umm Farriss, complained that a sex slave had looked her in the eye
Published:
19:54 GMT, 2 December 2014
|
Updated:
21:37 GMT, 2 December 2014
British women are suspected of running sex slave brothels for Islamic State fighters in Syria.
They are among scores of European women who have flocked to the warzone in the hope of becoming ‘jihadi brides’.
Academic experts monitoring the lawless region have identified at least 11 women linked to frontline fighters.
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British jihadi brides have been
messaging each other on Twitter about life in Raqqa, Syria (pictured),
including posts about sex slaves taken from the minority Yazidi
religious group
They
were shocked to discover references to sex slaves including a British
fundamentalist complaining that one Yazidi girl dared to look her in the
eye.
Hundreds
of girls and women belonging to the Kurdish religious minority have
been kidnapped, tortured and raped by the terrorist group.
Yet
despite the horror stories of their treatment there is growing evidence
of British women being drawn to the region support militant fighters.
Melanie
Smith, of the King’s College International Centre for the Study of
Radicalisation, said there are ‘hundreds’ of girls who want to travel
across Europe to Syria.
‘Hundreds. I come across girls every day who say, ‘I’m so desperate to go over there but it’s just so hard for me,’ she said.
‘The
proportion of girls who eventually make the transition from wanting to
go to physically going is tiny. But there are so many people that want
to go. And it’s fairly overwhelming.’
Miss Smith said that once the women arrive in Syria getting married to one of the many foreign fighters is easy.
She
said there is even a ‘Jihad Matchmaker’ service on Twitter in which
women can post photographs of themselves for the men to choose from.
Among
those who have travelled from Britain are Manchester twins Salma and
Zahra Halane, 16, who fled their family home in the middle of the night
in June.
Glaswegian
public schoolgirl Aqsa Mahmood, 20, was reported missing by her parents
a year ago before surfacing in Syria in February as an outspoken
supporter of the terrorist group.
Khadijah
Dare, 22, arranged to marry an Islamic State fighter via Facebook and
moved to Syria in 2012. She now posts photographs online of her son
holding an AK-47.
Aqsa
Mahmood, 20 (left) and Salma Halane, 16, are among the British women
known to be in Syria. Another, Umm Farriss wrote recently to complain
that one sex slave had looked her in the eye
Many
women are apparently lured to Syria by the prolific online activities of
fighters who work hard to present a ‘romantic’ image of the bloodshed.
They
exchange messages on sites including Facebook, Twitter and Ask.fm,
often including marriage proposals, before travelling to Syria via
Turkey.
Once
in the country, most likely in the stronghold of Raqqa, the must adhere
to hardline sharia law, including wearing the niqab, and find
themselves cooking and cleaning.
Some
even post blogs about their lives, including tips on cooking high
calorie meals for their thin partners who are losing weight on the
battlefield.
They
offer advice to other women considering travelling to Syria, including
the fact that chocolate is difficult to come by but hair straighteners
can be bought.
One British woman, Umm Farriss, wrote recently on social media complaining that a sex slave had dared to look her in the eye.
A
teenager posted a picture of Adolf Hitler with the words, ‘I could have
extinguished every Jew in Europe but I left them so you would be able
to do it for me.’
Another commented ‘I wish I did it’ after being asked about the murder of Israeli-American journalist Steven Sotloff.
Miss
Smith said seven of the British women live and work together and are
married to husbands who all fight alongside one another.
She said many are answering a call for women with no specialist or professional skills to help them build a new Islamic state.
‘It’s very much a domestic housewife role at best,’ she said. ‘It’s not much of a life.’
Asked
why women would want to join Islamic State she added: ‘There may be
pressure from parents: you should study for your A levels so you can go
to university so you can be a doctor or a lawyer or an engineer …
‘There’s
a lot of that kind of mentality. It’s laziness, really. And they’re
bored with their life here. They say they have more freedom in IS.
‘They see eight women living in a house in Raqqa who all get on famously and they tweet each other all the time.
‘That’s something they haven’t had, the sense of community and independence.’
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