People in Mosul call it “the Biter” or “Clipper” – a metal
instrument newly introduced by Isis officials to punish women whose
clothes they claim do not completely conceal their body. A former school
director, who fled from the city earlier this month, describes the tool
as causing agonising pain by clipping off pieces of flesh.
Fatima, a 22-year-old house-wife who does not want to give her full
name, said she had finally escaped from Mosul after several failed
attempts because her children were starving and Isis had become more
violent and sadistic compared with a year ago, especially towards
women.
“The Biter has become a nightmare for us,” Fatima said after reaching
safety in Mabrouka Camp for displaced people near Ras al-Ayn in
Kurdish-controlled north-east Syria. “My sister was punished so harshly
last month because she had forgotten her gloves and left them at home.”
Isis insists that women be fully veiled, wear loose or baggy
trousers, socks and gloves, and be accompanied by a male relative
whenever they step outside their homes.
Fatima said that a month after the use of this metal tool to punish
her sister “the bruises and scars are still visible on her arm.” She
quoted her sister as saying that “the biting punishment is more painful
than labour pains.” Other witnesses describe the Biter as operating like
an animal trap, or a metal jaw with teeth that cut into the flesh.
It is difficult and dangerous to escape from Mosul, which Isis has
held since capturing it from the Iraqi army in June 2014. But people
from the city, who have had themselves smuggled across the border to
Syria and then to Kurdish-controlled territory known as Rojava in the
past two months, all confirm that living conditions have deteriorated
sharply. There are serious shortages of almost everything including
food, fuel, water and electricity.
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