TRIGGER WARNING: This article deals with accounts of sexual assault and violence. It may be distressing to readers.
By HANNAH PAINE
The physically violent atrocities commited by Islamic State are both well documented and horrifying. But now new evidence has emerged today showing violence of a sexual nature being perpetrated by Islamic State against young women and girls.
A chilling video has been released showing IS fighters bartering and selling captured girls as sex slaves — thought to be women of the Yazidi religious minority, captured during an ISIS attack on Mount Sinjar in August — at a market.
As if they were bags of rice, decorative vases or cattle, the young women are paraded around the market and sold to the highest bidder. The fate that awaits them following sale is a life of no autonomy, constant and merciless sexual abuse and a life devoid of hope.
The video footage was shot in the northwestern city of Mosul in Iraq, which was seized by Islamic State fighters in June. Please be warned, the footage may be distressing for some readers.
http://youtu.be/tVISyjFwXAU
The video, which was obtained by local news station AlAan TV, starts off with one fighter announcing: “Today is the slave market day.” The bartering begins as the men argue about prices — with one militant offering three banknotes (roughly $100), and another agreeing to trade a girl for a gun.
Top Comments
How in the hell are these videos even getting out to the world. We can be spied on day and night yet the perpetrators of these films can't be tracked down? The web servers can't be traced? What a joke! It suits the western world to use these USA supported terrorists to scare the hell out of us but they can't find them? Yeah, right.
With respect to everyone comparing the lack of comments on this story compared to the Melb Cup ... firstly, many of the people commenting on the cup story, would've watched the tragedy unfold or had read about it, and if they're anything like me, well, it just saddens me to think that a few animals died at a major cultural event (some will hate that association). And its a new tragedy. It happened, was reported, then people started commenting to relieve themselves of their emotions.
The ISIS or indeed wider Islamic domination of women, story is starting to get hard for people to comprehend a solution to. We keep seeing evidence of the atrocities and yet nothing seems to stop them from committing them - so how are we able to find a solution in our minds? We can't seem to have 200 young women released from slavery; we can't stop ISIS from trading women like rag dolls, raping them, killing them; we can't stop grown men slaughtering other innocent, grown men. This is when people start to stick their heads in the sand, because having those strong themes of human deprivation and brutality unresolved in our minds, doesn't help us live happy lives.
Doesn't mean we don't do something about it on a national level or through aid or care organisations, but I understand people not wanting to consume media about it every single day (or every second day). Also, there was a massive hashtag campaign to raise awareness and people bagged it, by saying it did nothing. Well, it gave attention to a bunch of 200+ young women who are being held against their will. It's not perfect; its not really that clever, but its something that was done by people who feel, quite possibly like I do, that they can't do anything other than send good vibe, to help these people.
Anyway, just another perspective.