Articles features
IS set woman ablaze for refusing 'extreme sex'
New York May 19
A 20-year-old woman was
burnt alive after refusing to perform an "extreme sex act" on a militant
of the Islamic State (IS) extremist group, the UN envoy on sexual
violence in conflict was quoted as saying on Tuesday.
"We heard
one case of a 20-year-old girl who was burned alive because she refused
to perform an extreme sex act," Zainab Bangura told the Middle East Eye
website.
"We learned of many other sadistic sexual acts," Bangura added.
She
said the inhuman campaign of rape and brutality IS was waging against
women was worse than in any other war zone she has worked in, including
Bosnia, Congo, South Sudan, the Central African Republic and Somalia.
Bangura
had just returned from a fact-finding mission in Syria, Iraq and three
other Middle Eastern countries, where she met officials, survivors from
the Yazidi, Christian and Turkmen minorities and frontline workers.
IS
is abducting young women and girls, stripping them naked and leering at
them, examining their breasts and testing their virginity before
selling and re-selling them as sex slaves and forcing them into
short-term marriages and prostitution, Bangura said.
"The
youngest, and those considered the prettiest virgins fetch higher prices
and are sent to Raqqa, the IS stronghold," she said.
Some have
managed to flee their captors or to commit suicide, but when IS
discovered girls used their headscarves to hang themselves, they forced
them to remove these, Bangura said.
"I learned of three girls
who tried to commit suicide by drinking rat poison, which had been left
in a room. They started vomiting and were rushed to hospital and washed
out. When they came back, they were brutally attacked."
Sexual
violence against women and girls is central to IS's ideology and is used
to recruit fighters, raise funds, enforce discipline and advance their
radical ideology, according to Bangura.
"IS is organised, coordinated and operates on a widespread and systematic basis to commit a staggering array of atrocities."
"We struggled to understand the mentality of people who commit such crimes," she said.