By The Week
The release and return of a number of Christian women taken as slaves by
Islamic State in Iraq has prompted questions about those still being
held.
In August 2014, Isis militants swept through a cluster of Christian
towns near Mosul, taking control and forcing thousands to flee.
Among
the towns was Qaraqosh, which was Iraq's largest Christian town with a
population of 50,000. Once in command, the militants took many of the
Christian women into captivity and sold them as slaves across the
caliphate.
Qaraqosh remained under Isis control until 2016 but
now, little by little, some residents who were forced to flee “have been
returning to recover what belongings remain, to assess the damage to
their property, and to attend church services and holidays”, says The Atlantic.
Reports suggest almost 26,000 Christians have now returned to their homes in the town but so far, of the 45 women taken from Qaraqosh, only seven have returned.
Though much is known of the plight of the Yazidis, “much less is known about the Christian women kidnapped by Isis”, says The Sunday Times.
“There are fewer of them - dozens rather than thousands - but the impact on their ancient society has been enormous”.
What happened to the women?
For
two and a half years, Rana, a woman captured in Qaraqosh, was enslaved
by Isis and sold to ever more abusive “owners” for up to £19,000. “As
the militants consolidated their power over large swathes of Syria and
Iraq, she fed their children, cleaned their houses and endured their
brutal violence,” says the Sunday Times.
“I wanted to escape but
there was no way to run away or leave,” Rana told the paper. “All the
streets were full of mines. The family said, ‘If you go outside that
door we will kill you.’”
Another recently freed Christian woman,
Rita Habib, said that all her captors were men, married with children
and subjected her to rape and abuse, forcing her to clean their houses.
“They did evil things to us. They beat us and raped us,” she told Kurdistan 24.
“The worst of all was girls aged nine who were raped. Girls would be sold for $4,000 to $15,000.”
How were they rescued?
Last
year, as Isis retreated in the face of an onslaught from international
forces, The Times reports Rana and Habib were rescued and returned home.
Rana
and Habib were two of a number of women who were rescued by men posing
as jihadists as part of the Iraqi Christian group Shlama Foundation,
which paid £20,000 to bring each woman back.
“If anyone had found
out the unnamed men were posing as jihadists to help the women get out
they would’ve been killed,” says the Daily Mirror.