- 23-year-old commander had a senior role within the black-clad army
- Member of fearsome female army al-Khansa who dole out savage beatings
- Responsible for welcoming new European recruits into Syria
- But fled and is warning vulnerable girls not to fall for Isis propaganda
A female
jihadi responsible for helping to deliver hundreds of young European
girls to Isis has warned young women of the horrifying conditions that
await them.
The
23-year-old Syrian woman, understood to have held a senior role within
the so-called caliphate, has defected and revealed the inner-workings of
the terror group.
The
woman – who uses the alias Um Asma because she fears retaliation –
welcomed the young girls who crossed the border from Turkey, and
introduced them to life with the black-clad army.
Militants: Terrifying eyewitness accounts have described how women are fined and beaten simply for not
covering their eyes, and how the brutal
all-female al-Khansa brigade (pictured) doles out savage
beatings to those who do not abide by its strict laws
beatings to those who do not abide by its strict laws
Female army: Black-cloaked women posing with Kalashnikov rifles, an ISIS flag and a white BMW in Syria

Exodus: The three Bradford sister, Khadija (left), Sugra (centre) and
Zohra Dawood (right) who fled the UK with their nine children to join
their brother and Isis inSyria
‘You are young,’ she warned European women, in an interview with German newspaper Bild am Sonntag.
‘The caliphate is not what you think it is. Women are whipped, sold and stoned. Corpses are on display publicly for weeks.’
After
collected the European girls – most of whom were from the UK, France
and Germany – Um Asma took the girls to Raqqa, the ‘capital’ of the Isis
caliphate.
She
admitted that she sometimes collected as many as 50 new-arrivals at a
time and delivered them to the brutal terror group in Syria.
Once
the girls had arrived, the received a four-week training course,
learning skills such as how to use a firearm, and the study of the
Koran.
Wearing
a full niqab throughout the interview, covering everything but her
eyes, the woman confessed to operating as a member of the female terror
group al-Khansa.

Brides-to-be: The three Bethnal Green schoolgirls Amira Abase, 15,
Shamima Begum 15, and Kadiza Sultana, 16, caught on CCTV as they fled
the UK for Syria, via Gatwick Airport
Innocence lost: Under the alias Abu Saeed Al-Britani, former Morrisons
security guard Omar Hussain (background)
tries to portray life under
ISIS rule as peaceful and friendly, despite sharing images of young
children with automatic weapons
Threat: Through innocent tweets in which he shows Syria's wonderful
parks, Hussain tries to show that life under Islamic State rule is
normal and 'safe'
She described how she was forced to join the terror group in order to survive, after Raqqa fell in 2013.
But
before the Syrian war begin in 2011, she said she wore ‘entirely normal
clothes, had Christian friends, listened to music and went dancing’.
The
al-Khansa group holds a brutally misogynist view of life, believing
that women can marry jihadists from as young as nine years old.
When she was
shown a photograph of the 15-year-old German girl, Leonara, who ran
away to join the caliphate in March, Um Asma admitted that she had
helped the girl travel from the Turkish border city of Gazientep to
Raqqa.
But she chillingly insisted the girl would never return to Germany ‘alive’.
Um
Asma is just one of many Isis recruits banding together in a
terrifyingly efficient operation to lure impressionable young girls from
across Europe to join Isis.
Three
sisters from Bradford are some of the most recent to make the journey
from the UK to Syria, lured to the country by their religious fanatic
brother.
Khadija,
30, Sugra, 34, and Zohra, 33, Dawood hit headlines after deciding to
take their nine young children with them to the warzone.
Isis lure: Young and vulnerable girls from around the world are being
drawn to join Isis in Raqqa, Syria, after being radicalised by Isis
propaganda teams online
Transformation: Online accounts of the young girls chart their tragic
transformation from fun-lovin
pre-teens to fully-radicalised jihadi
brides-to-be
Their
actions have been condemned by their parents, for willingly putting
their grandchildren in a terrifying and life-threatening situation.
A
former Morrisons security guard – dubbed the ‘loneliest jihadi’
following a series of internet posts in which he complained about not
being able to find a jihadi bride – is another attempting to lure women
to join him in the caliphate.
Omar Hussain, 28, released a blog post this month insisting that it is safe for ‘sisters’ to come to Syria.
He
claimed the country has been wrongly portrayed as a ‘war-torn country
with bombs dropping every day and dead bodies lying on the streets’,
despite regular Isis propaganda videos showing executions and bomb
raids.
Hussain
– who goes by the alias Abu Saeed Al-Britani – tried to lure women with
promises of state benefits, cash bonuses, cheap bus travel and
protection from airstrikes.
'When
sisters come across the borders into the State, they are escorted to
the accommodation where other single sisters also stay, and their new
life under the shade of the Shariah begins
Lonely: Omar Hussain (pictured), the former Morrisons security guard who
blogs about his life as an ISIS fighter in Syria, has yet again tried
to lure women to the country with the promise of state benefits
Peaceful: Hussain shows of an ethereal image of 'Raqqa Park' in the
terror group's self-proclaimed capital, where it carries out bloody
executions
'Whether a
sister wishes to remain single or decides to get married, the monthly
wages still continue, as does the weekly supply of basic food items like
rice, oil, bread, pasta and other food stuff.
'Now
when all the families and sisters come, they are given houses in the
middle of Dawlah [ISIS] territory with the enemy so far away.'
He
has posted numerous photographs of parks in Syria, showing manicured
lawns and trees in bloom in an attempt to portray the city as an idyllic
place to live.
Isis
has also sought to promote an image of the ‘good life’ in Raqqa with
videos showing roads teeming with cars, markets full of customers and
streets being repaved with cement.
But
a local resident who goes by the pseudonym Raqqawi, for his own safety,
fiercely contested the claims of people like Hussain.
‘From the first moment of its control over Raqqa, ISIS adopted a policy of horror and terror.’
He confirmed that women are fined and beaten for not covering their eyes.
Gruesome: Public crucifixions in the ISIS stronghold of Raqqa (pictured)
in northern Syria have become common-place, but Hussain claims
'sisters' who travel to the country will be safe
'Whether a
sister wishes to remain single or decides to get married, the monthly
wages still continue, as does the weekly supply of basic food items like
rice, oil, bread, pasta and other food stuff.
'Now
when all the families and sisters come, they are given houses in the
middle of Dawlah [ISIS] territory with the enemy so far away.'
He
has posted numerous photographs of parks in Syria, showing manicured
lawns and trees in bloom in an attempt to portray the city as an idyllic
place to live.
Isis
has also sought to promote an image of the ‘good life’ in Raqqa with
videos showing roads teeming with cars, markets full of customers and
streets being repaved with cement.
But
a local resident who goes by the pseudonym Raqqawi, for his own safety,
fiercely contested the claims of people like Hussain.
‘From the first moment of its control over Raqqa, ISIS adopted a policy of horror and terror.’
He confirmed that women are fined and beaten for not covering their eyes.
He went on
to describe how a furious crowd swarmed around one whose face veil came
down after she tripped in the street, and threatened to lash her husband
if it ever happened again.
Raqqa was the first provincial capital in Syria to fall from regime control when rebels seized it in March 2013.
But
Isis soon destroyed those rebels and moved quickly to establish a
‘model city’ under its harsh interpretation of Islamic law, according to
terrorism researcher Hisham al-Hashimi.
TWINS 'LURING FELLOW BRITS'
The
‘terror twins’ who fled Britain to join Islamic State are key figures
in an online propaganda campaign to convince girls around the world to
join the terror group, according to researchers.
Salma
and Zahra Halane, 17, left their homes in Manchester to become jihadi
brides in Syria last July. They were widowed after their husbands died
fighting for IS.
They
are now said to have ‘influential roles’ among a group of British women
using social media to lure other Westerners to Syria with promises of
an ‘Islamic utopia’, according to the Institute for Strategic Dialogue
think-tank and King’s College London.
Their
report says the twins, who were A-grade students hoping to become
doctors before they left home, were ‘particularly vocal’ in propaganda.
Another
female defector – a former Isis commander – reported in May that she
had mentored the three British schoolgirls, who sparked an international
manhunt when they fled via Gatwick airport in February.
She
revealed that the girls – who attended the same school in Bethnal
Green, East London – were being trained for ‘special missions’ and are
likely to die in the Middle East.
The
defector added that IS has a well-structured grooming system to target
vulnerable foreign youngsters such as the three British girls.
‘IS have educated people who know how to deal with the psychology of others, how to deal with the human being,’ she explained.
The
Sky News report exposed IS’s grooming headquarters – an internet cafe
in Raqqa – where its operatives work shifts coordinated with the time
zones of countries in which they have the most influence.
Speaking
to Sky News reporter Stuart Ramsay from a secret location in Turkey,
she said: 'These girls, because they are very young, they want (need)
four or three months to start (missions).'
Her
comments came as a new report suggested that 'terror twins' Zahra and
Salma Halane, 16, from Manchester 'have taken on influential roles'
within the group of British women who have travelled to the war zone,
including urging others to join them.
The
Metropolitan Police believe around 600 Britons have travelled to Syria
and Iraq since the conflict began, and around half are believed to have
returned to the UK.
Source:dailymail.co.uk

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