Thursday, March 31, 2016

EXCLUSIVE - A mother's tale of anguish: ISIS brutes smash Yazidi woman in the face with a Kalashnikov and kidnap two of her daughters - one aged just THREE

EXCLUSIVE - A mother's tale of anguish: ISIS brutes smash Yazidi woman in the face with a Kalashnikov and kidnap two of her daughters - one aged just THREE


  • Mother-of-nine Noora and her entire family taken hostage by ISIS fighters
  • Her eldest daughter, 13, and Basima, three, both kidnapped by extremists
  • 'I tried to stop him, he hit me in the face with his gun,' she told MailOnline
  • Noora tried to hide her other daughters' ages to save them from slavery
  • Dressed ten-year-old daughter in nappy, told her to act mentally disabled
  • Kept food from daughter Sahira, 13, so she did not look like young woman
  • See more news on ISIS barbarity at www.dailymail.co.uk/isis


A Yazidi mother has told how ISIS took two of her daughters to be slaves, one just three-years-old.

Distraught Noora broke down in tears as revealed how she fought with an ISIS fighter to stop him taking her 'beautiful, blonde' toddler and her beloved oldest child, aged 13.

And the mother-of-nine recounted how she tried to conceal her daughters' ages to prevent them from a life of slavery.

Heart-broken Noora told MailOnline: 'ISIS took my baby daughter Basima. She was only three years old, but she has blonde hair, she is beautiful. I tried to stop him, I fought with him, but he hit me in the face with his gun, a Kalishnkov. There was nothing I could do.'

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Harrowing: Noora, a Yazidi mother of nine, told MailOnline of how ISIS kidnapped her two daughters - the youngest aged just three
Harrowing: Noora, a Yazidi mother of nine, told MailOnline of how ISIS kidnapped her two daughters - the youngest aged just three
Captive: From the relative safety of a refugee camp in Dohuk, Iraq, where she lives with her seven other children (pictured), she said an ISIS fighter struck her in the face with a rifle before taking her daughters
Captive: From the relative safety of a refugee camp in Dohuk, Iraq, where she lives with her seven other children (pictured), she said an ISIS fighter struck her in the face with a rifle before taking her daughters
Noora and her children were among the thousands of Yazidis who sought sanctuary on Sinjar Mountain when ISIS stormed into their village in northern Iraq in August 2014.
But the desperate mother was forced back down to her village in search of water to sustain her infant children due to the heat of the Middle Eastern summer.

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