The teenager considered sex slave by al-Baghdad

The teenager considered sex slave by al-Baghdad

In his past months on the run, the leader of the Islamic State group, Abu Bakr al-Bagdad, was frustrated, afraid of traitors, sometimes disguised as a shepherd but always dependent on a narrow circle of his faithful men. According to a scripture published by The Associated Press, [...]

In his past months on the run, the leader of the Islamic State group, Abu Bakr al-Bagdad, was frustrated, afraid of traitors, sometimes disguised as a shepherd but always dependent on a narrow circle of his faithful men.

According to a script published by The Associated Press, his associates have said he was obsessed with his security and well-being and trying to find security in towns and deserts in eastern Syria near the Iraqi border, while extremists' properties were destroyed.

After all, the brutal leader once named “Kalifi” abandoned the ISIS areas, with “screeching” on hostile territory in Syria's northwest province of Idlib, led by rivals of the radical group associated with al-Qaeda.

There, he blew himself up during an October 26th attack by US Special Forces in his fortified house.

But according to the same writing, for months, he kept a teenager as a slave, and she said how he brought him with him when he moved, traveling with a group of seven close associates.

The girl Yezid, who was released in a US-led attack in May, said al-Baghdad initially tried to flee to Idlib at the end of 2017.

She confessed that one night she was loaded in a three - vehicle column that included the director of I SIS, his wife and security siege left for the province.

The car arrived on a main road, but then returned, apparently out of fear of being victimized, said the girl, who was 17 years old.

For about a week they stayed in the southeastern city of Syria Hajin, near the Iraqi border. Then they moved north to Dashisa, another border town in Syria within the territory held by I SIS.

There, the teenager Jezid spent four months in the house of al-Baghdad's father-in-law, a close associate named Abu Abdullah al-Zubaie.

Al-Baghdad would visit him there often and rape him and beat him every now and then, she said.

He was moving only at night, wearing sneakers and covering his face, always with about five security men referring to him as “Hajji” or “sheik”, she pointed out.

When I asked him anything, he gave me no answers for security reasons. Not everyone knew where it was”, she said.

In the spring of 2018, she was given to another man, who brought her out of Dash.

This was the last time she saw al-Baghdad, although she sent her a piece of jewelry as a gift, she further confessed to her teenager.

It seems al-Baghdad moved from one country to another in eastern Syria over the next year, after an I castle The SIS fell into US-led forces before going to Idlieb sometime in the spring.

Furthermore, The Associated Press writes that during that time, al-Bagdad was a “nervous brittle” and complaining of treason.

Saiit, an Iraqi who had married another of al-Zubai's daughters, was arrested by Iraqi authorities in June.

He said he saw al-Baghdad several times over 18 months, starting in Hyin at the end of 2017.

The last time was in desert regions along the Syrian-Iraq border not long before Sy's own capture.

He said al-Baghdad entrusted him with sending messages to “diskfling” for lieutenants inside Iraq.

Iraqi and Kurdish Syrian officials have said they have cultivated specific resources that led to the ISIS leader, and Sy is believed to be one of them.

An American official, meanwhile, said it seemed that Syrian Kurds managed to exploit someone within the inner circle of al-Baghdadi, whose information was important in hunting.

Saiit said al-Baghdad's movements were very limited, much more so when he lost territory.

He walked around with a suicide belt, even slept with one beside him, and made his helpers wear belts as well.

I Leader The SIS never used a mobile phone; only its assistant Abu Hassan al-Muhaier held one, using a Galaxy 7, said Saiit, who remains in custody in Iraq.

Also, according to The Associated Press's writing, stress was added to him, what affected the diabetes of the head of ISIS, and he had to constantly monitor blood sugar and take insulin.

As a result, he did not fast during the holy month of Ramadan and forced his aides not to fast too, Syi said.

Several times, al-Baghdad was disguised as grass, he said.

When al-Baghdad's chief of security, Abu Sabah, realized of a possible raid on the Syrian-Iraq border desert area where they were hiding they threw their tents and hid al-Baghdadin and al-Muhaer inside a pit covered with uncleanness, Sayit said.

They have let the sheep wander to the top of the pit to disguise it further. After the threat of the raid ended, they returned and returned the tents again, he said.

Al-Baghdad moved with a circle of five to seven people, including al-Muhaier, al-Zubaie and Abu Sabah; and the former governor of the group for Iraq, known as Tayseer or Abu al-Hakim.

Al-Muhaier was killed on the same day as al-Baghdadi, in a special US-led military operation.

Meanwhile on Monday, Turkish officials said they arrested al-Baghdadi's oldest sister in Azaz, the northwestern region of Syria. They're all property out of government control.

I Leader SIS was also in contact with its top deputy, Hajji Abdullah, said Syit.

Iraqi officials say al-Baghdadi placed him responsible for most of the group's administrative and financial issues.

Saiit said he believes Haxhi Abdullah is actually the man called al-Baghdad's successor before his murder, identified by the nickname Abu Ibrahim al-Hashem Al-Kurish.

US officials, meanwhile, have indicated they did not know when al-Baghdadi arrived in Idrib but said he chose the location because it was the last territory outside the Syrian government's control.

While Syria officials said they defeated his moves in May but suspected he fled there after the fall of the last territory of I SIS at the end of March.

There, he allegedly hid in a complex in Barisha village, about 5 km (3 km) from the border with Turkey.

Like many of Idlib's border sites, it is packed with people displaced from all over Syria and managed by Hayat Tahir al-Sham, a militant group linked to al-Qaeda and a rival with ISIS.

The complex belonged to a man named Abu Mohammed al-Haalabi, who was a sheep merchant but had little contact with his neighbours, some residents told the AP.

They spoke on condition of anonymity for fear that they would be endangered by talking about the country.

Iraqi officials said that “technic” of al-Baghdadi A man who cared for logistics was also killed in the attack.

While one resident said nearly a dozen helicopters were thrown over their village before 11 o'clock on the night of October 26, in a US-run raid.

We went out on the balcony to see and they started shooting, with automatic rifles. So we went in and we hid”, confessed to the resident.

Then there was an air operation west of the village, towards al-Haalabi's house. Later, Americans warned residents to leave home because they would be blown up.

No one expected al-Bagdad to be here”, another resident said.

 

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