When stories like this come out, I can't help but think that the future Jihadists also read them and would think twice about giving their lives over to such maniacs.
INSIDE ISLAMIC STATE GROUP'S RULE: CREATING A NATION OF FEAR
BY ZEINA KARAM, VIVIAN SALAMA, BRAM JANSSEN, AND LEE KEATH
ASSOCIATED PRESS
ESKI MOSUL, Iraq (AP) -- When the Islamic State fighters burst into the Iraqi village of Eski Mosul, Sheikh Abdullah Ibrahim knew his wife was in trouble.
Buthaina Ibrahim was an outspoken human rights advocate who had once run for the provincial council in Mosul. The IS fighters demanded she apply for a "repentance card." Under the rule of the extremist group, all former police officers, soldiers and people whose activities are deemed "heretical" must sign the card and carry it with them at all times.
"She said she'd never stoop so low," her husband said.
Buthaina Ibrahim was an outlier in her defiance of the Islamic State. It would cost her dearly.
The "caliphate," declared a year ago, demands obedience. Untold numbers have been killed because they were deemed dangerous to the IS, or insufficiently pious; 5-8 million endure a regime that has swiftly turned their world upside down, extending its control into every corner of life to enforce its own radical interpretation of Islamic law, or Shariah.
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News from The Associated Press
INSIDE ISLAMIC STATE GROUP'S RULE: CREATING A NATION OF FEAR
BY ZEINA KARAM, VIVIAN SALAMA, BRAM JANSSEN, AND LEE KEATH
ASSOCIATED PRESS

ESKI MOSUL, Iraq (AP) -- When the Islamic State fighters burst into the Iraqi village of Eski Mosul, Sheikh Abdullah Ibrahim knew his wife was in trouble.
Buthaina Ibrahim was an outspoken human rights advocate who had once run for the provincial council in Mosul. The IS fighters demanded she apply for a "repentance card." Under the rule of the extremist group, all former police officers, soldiers and people whose activities are deemed "heretical" must sign the card and carry it with them at all times.
"She said she'd never stoop so low," her husband said.
Buthaina Ibrahim was an outlier in her defiance of the Islamic State. It would cost her dearly.
The "caliphate," declared a year ago, demands obedience. Untold numbers have been killed because they were deemed dangerous to the IS, or insufficiently pious; 5-8 million endure a regime that has swiftly turned their world upside down, extending its control into every corner of life to enforce its own radical interpretation of Islamic law, or Shariah.
Continue reading at:
Continue reading at:
News from The Associated Press