- Abu Anas Al-Libi is alleged to have executed the women in Fallujah in Iraq
- Most of the women were Yazidi, and some were believed to be pregnant
- Militants then turned a mosque into a prison, where they held hundreds
Published:
09:27 GMT, 18 December 2014
|
Updated:
11:00 GMT, 18 December 2014
A
single ISIS militant is suspected to be alone responsible for gunning
down at least 150 women and girls, including some who were pregnant,
because they refused to marry jihadists.
Abu
Anas Al-Libi executed the women before burying their bodies in mass
graves in Fallujah in the Iraqi province of Al Anbar, the Iraqi Ministry
of Human Rights said in a statement.
It
is thought he killed the women, most of whom were Yazidi, because they
refused to enter into sham temporary marriages with Islamic State
fighters, where they would effectively be treated as sex slaves.
ISIS fighters holding the Al-Qaeda
flag with 'Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant' written on it. A single
militant from the group is believed to be alone responsbile for gunning
down 150 women
'At
least 150 females, including pregnant women, were executed in Fallujah
by a militant named Abu Anas Al-Libi after they refused to accept jihad
marriage,' the statement said.
'Many
families were also forced to migrate from the province's northern town
of Al-Wafa after hundreds of residents received death threats.'
The
statement went on to say that the militants then turned a mosque in
Fallujah into a prison, where they held hundreds of men and women.
Al-
Libi is not the extremist with the same name who is alleged to have
helped carry out East Africa's embassy bombings in 1998 that killed 224
people in Kenya and Tanzania.
ISIS
fighters have taken thousands of women and children as captives,
especially around 2,500 women from the minority Yazidi sect in Iraq.
+2
It is thought that most of the executed women were from the Yazidi sect in Iraq (pictured)
A
UN report last month said these women were then taken as far as Raqqa
in Syria and sold to ISIS fighters, or given as gifts to their leaders.
Some of them, it claims, were then used for sex.
It
was recently revealed that ISIS has published a shocking guidebook for
its fighters on how to rape women and girls they had taken into slavery.
The
Arabic manual, titled Questions And Answers On Taking Captives And
Slaves, instructs ISIS fighters on how to buy and sell women and girls
who have been captured in war as booty.
It was recently revealed that ISIS has
published a shocking guidebook for its fighters on how to rape women
and girls they had taken into slavery
The
document, published by the Research and Fatwa Department of ISIS, gives
its fighters the green light to turn captured women into slaves and
concubines, and even give them as gifts to one another.
It
was circulated on the Twitter accounts of senior IS leaders and was
distributed by masked IS fighters outside a large mosque in Iraq's
second city Mosul, which is controlled by the group.
The
document says that all 'unbelieving' women, including Jews and
Christians, can be taken as captives and sold as slaves. However, it
prohibits the enslavement of Muslim women, even if they have become
apostates.
ISIS controls parts of Iraq, as well as large swathes of northern and eastern Syria.
This
week, the bodies of 230 people killed by the militant group were found
in a mass grave uncovered by their relatives in Syria's Deir Ezzor
province.
The
discovery brings the number of Shaitat tribal members slain during the
jihadists' summer advance in Deir Ezzor province near Iraq to more than
900, the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights said.
The
Britain-based group said it had 'learned from trusted sources that more
than 230 bodies have been found in a mass grave in the desert near
Al-Kashkiyeh in the east of Deir Ezzor'.
The
'vast majority' were civilians, many of them executed in cold blood
after the tribe rose up against the Islamic State after it had driven
out rival jihadists and rebels from the area.
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