Iraq News Now

Teenage brides trapped between ISIS and its victors

Teenage brides trapped between ISIS and its victors
Teenage brides trapped between ISIS and its victors

2019-04-13 00:00:00 - Source: Baghdad Post

Rawan Aboud tried to escape ISIS after the death of her

abusive first husband, a militant killed fighting for the group. She was jailed

and forced to marry another fighter. When he died, she finally fled.

Now she is interned with fanatic supporters of the violent

jihadist group she has sought refuge from since the age of 13.

“I married age 12,” said the Syrian girl, now 18. “My

husband then brought me to Raqqa. He beat me and said I was an apostate for

trying to leave.”

Thousands of women, especially foreigners who flocked from

Europe and North African countries, willingly joined ISIS, subscribing to its

brutal interpretation of Islam and marrying militants.

Some remain ardent supporters of its ideology and live in

camps they fled to in eastern Syria which are under the control of the

U.S.-backed forces that drove IS from its final piece of territory last month.

But many like Aboud, married off by conservative Muslim

families in Syria, Iraq and Lebanon, had no choice.

Aboud, several Syrians and a Lebanese woman also wed as a

child to a man who joined IS are now detained alongside its die-hard adherents

in a guarded section of al-Hol camp.

Regarded as suspect by Kurdish-led forces that helped defeat

the jihadists and persecuted by women they are locked up with, they fear they

will rot in detention or face death at the hands of their extreme fellow

detainees.

Aboud has spent three months at al-Hol along with more than

60,000 people who fled the battle for Baghouz, the final shred of populated

territory that Islamic State had held until its defeat there last month.

In an interview with Reuters this month, she wore a green

coat, fingerless gloves and eye make-up behind her veil, which she only wears

to avoid drawing the attention of IS supporters.

She used the pejorative acronym Daesh for IS, rather than

“dawla”, Arabic for state, which many in the camp still use. She said her

husbands were dead, not martyred, as slain militants are usually described by

supporters.

“My first husband was killed fighting three years ago, thank

God.”

Aboud tried to flee IS territory and was jailed in its Raqqa

stronghold. When the U.S. coalition began bombing the city, her nine-month-old

daughter was killed. Militants moved her and other women from town to town as

they retreated, and married her to another fighter who also killed several

months ago.

She then escaped with her other daughter, now four.

They face an uncertain future.

“I want to go to my family in Idlib. But right now I’d

settle for just another part of the camp, away from the foreigners. Somewhere I

can use a phone,” she said.

The security forces that guard al-Hol have denied her

requests to move, she said. “They keep saying tomorrow and asking, why did you

marry an IS fighter.”

The Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) that run the

camp did not immediately respond to a request for comment on her detention.

“SWINE AND INFIDELS”

“Because I fled and how I dress, the other women call me an

infidel. They throw stones at me. When I queue for water, they say this isn’t a

line for Syrians.”

Amal Susi, the Lebanese woman in the same section of the

camp, complained of similar treatment and feared never returning home.

The 20-year-old surrendered herself and her two children in

2017 to the SDF after her husband was killed in Raqqa. Months later she was returned

to IS territory in a prisoner swap, she said. “It was back to zero,” she said.

Her husband took her as a teenager to Syria to live in

Islamic State’s self-declared caliphate.

Susi is also waiting to be transferred to another section of

the camp. “Those of us forced to come should get to leave. IS supporters call

us swine and infidels, say we’re spies for the Kurds, and assault us.”

The SDF is struggling to cope with the number of suspected

militants and supporters languishing in detention centers and camps while some

Western countries refuse to allow their citizens to return.

Most Syrians and Iraqis roam al-Hol camp separately from

foreign women who are guarded by the SDF. Many foreigners use derogatory

jihadist terms against non-extremists and blame their plight solely on Islamic

State’s enemies.

Aboud, Susi and many others hope to get as far away from

them as possible.

“We’re not rid of Daesh. They’ve basically moved the Islamic

State here, that’s what they believe. They say we’ll build it again right here.

The camp is under their control,” Susi said.





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