ISIS Widow in NE Syria: I Couldn’t Believe I Got Rid of Him

A general view of Raqqa, Syria. (AFP)
A general view of Raqqa, Syria. (AFP)
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ISIS Widow in NE Syria: I Couldn’t Believe I Got Rid of Him

A general view of Raqqa, Syria. (AFP)
A general view of Raqqa, Syria. (AFP)

“I couldn’t believe I got rid of him and his oppression,” with these words Aisha Al-Ahmad, a minor and wife of an ISIS fighter, started telling her story to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.

Al-Ahmad lives with her family in the Rumailah neighborhood, the largest neighborhood in the city center of Syria’s northeastern city of Raqqa, the former capital of ISIS’ so-called caliphate.

She is the eldest of six sisters who live in a tribal society that embraces “obsolete” traditions, including early marriage.

Her first husband was an ISIS member known by his initials as M. A.

“In 2013, when I was 15, I got married to one of my relatives according to our tribe’s traditions stipulating that girls have to get married as soon as they reach puberty. My father worked in the cattle market and was on a low income,” Al-Ahmad told the Observatory.

“My first husband had stayed away from our house for so long, as he was a fighter of the ‘army of the caliphate state’ on the Tel Abyad frontline,” she added.

“Our marriage lasted for three years, during which I gave birth to three children. My ex-husband was blunt and irascible. On his holidays, he humiliated me by beating and abusing me during marital cohabitation as if I were an inanimate object or a body without a soul.”

“In 2016, during the Tal Abyad battles, the Office of Mujahideen Affairs informed me of the murder of my husband, aka ‘Abu Hassan.’ The news of his death was music to my ears. I felt as if I got out of prison and became free,” she recalled.

Al-Ahmad nodded a little with her gaze and told the Observatory: “I was born to suffer.”

“I lost my joy as once I finished ‘Iddah’ – in Islam, Iddah is the period of time a woman must observe after the death of her husband or after a divorce, ‘Abu Yusuf Al-Ansari,’ my ex-husband’s brother and also an ISIS fighter, proposed to me.”

“I refused and told my father that I thought of Al-Ansari as my brother, and I can’t marry another man after the death of my husband. However, all my attempts to reject this marriage were in vain. I was forced to get married for the second time.”

“My new husband was a fighter of ‘Jaish Al-Wilayah’ battalion and I gave birth to three children in 2016 and 2017.”

“During the battles of the liberation of Raqqa, specifically in the Rumailah area, my husband sustained a foot injury, and after his arrest, he was taken to Tal Abyad Hospital for treatment. He was imprisoned in Ayed prison in Al-Tabqa until he was released in 2019.”

Al-Ahmad is now a mother of six: three from each of her two husbands.

She has undergone several psychosocial rehabilitation programs and courses, like many minor females from Raqqa who have been victims of “obsolete tribal traditions” and early marriage, said the Observatory.



Israeli Defense Minister Says He Will End Detention without Charge of Jewish Settlers

Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)
Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)
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Israeli Defense Minister Says He Will End Detention without Charge of Jewish Settlers

Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)
Palestinians look at damaged cars after an Israeli settlers attack in Al-Mazraa Al-Qibleyeh near Ramallah, in the Israeli-occupied West Bank, November 20, 2024. (Reuters)

Israel’s new defense minister said Friday that he would stop issuing warrants to arrest West Bank settlers or hold them without charge or trial — a largely symbolic move that rights groups said risks emboldening settler violence in the Israeli-occupied territory.

Israel Katz called the arrest warrants “severe” and said issuing them was “inappropriate” as Palestinian militant attacks on settlers in the territory grow more frequent. He said settlers could be “brought to justice” in other ways.

The move protects Israeli settlers from being held in “administrative detention,” a shadowy form of incarceration where people are held without charge or trial.

Settlers are rarely arrested in the West Bank, where settler violence against Palestinians has spiraled since the outbreak of the war Oct. 7.

Katz’s decision was celebrated by far-right coalition allies of Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu. National Security Minister and settler firebrand Itamar Ben-Gvir applauded Katz and called the move a “correction of many years of mistreatment” and “justice for those who love the land.”

Since Oct. 7, 2023, violence toward Palestinians by Israeli settlers has soared to new heights, displacing at least 19 entire Palestinian communities, according to Israeli rights group Peace Now. In that time, attacks by Palestinian militants on settlers and within Israel have also grown more common.

An increasing number of Palestinians have been placed in administrative detention. Israel holds 3,443 administrative detainees in prison, according to data from the Israeli Prison Service, reported by rights group Hamoked. That figure stood around 1,200 just before the start of the war. The vast majority of them are Palestinian, with only a handful at any given time Israeli Jews, said Jessica Montell, the director of Hamoked.

“All of these detentions without charge or trial are illegitimate, but to declare that this measure will only be used against Palestinians...is to explicitly entrench another form of ethnic discrimination,” said Montell.