By Lydia Smith
A group of women
arrived at a roadblock in northern Syria, manned by armed members of the
Islamic State. No physical security checks were carried out on the group
because of a religious ban, and several minutes later, the IS members were hit
with a veil of bullets fired from the womens' concealed weapons.
Following the
incident, the IS, formerly known as the State of Iraq and Levant, decided to
establish a unit of female jihadist fighters for the first time.
The al-Khansa
battalion is one of such units - named after Al Khansa, a devout Muslim who
dedicated poetry and eulogies to jihad fighters after losing four sons in a war
against Persia at the time of the Prophet Mohammed.
In 2012, an
anonymous fatwa was distributed, calling for women to join jihad fighters in
Syria in their campaign for the country to return to ultra-conservative customs
and a broader Islamic caliphate.
Surprisingly, a
significant response to the propaganda was noted in Tunisia – to the point
where authorities intervened in an attempt to stop the phenomenon.
Many of the
al-Khansa female fighters are of Chechen descent, but women from Yemen and
Afghanistan have reportedly joined the battalion. The recruitment network is
allegedly related to the phenomenon of "black widows" enlisted for
suicide attacks.
Some members are
believed to have joined in response to the deaths of husbands or other family
members, assassinated by the Russian army in Chechnya or at the hands of the US
military in Afghanistan.
In the northern
Syrian city of Ar-Raqqah or Raqqa, on the north bank of the Euphrates River,
Al-Khansa has over 50 women affiliated with IS. According to an IBTimes UK eyewitness, many
are wives of immigrants in Syria, of Tunisian, Moroccan, French and British
nationalities.
Until fairly
recently, the battalion had patrolled the city's streets to pursue women.
According to our source, al-Khansa enforced legal marriages to
"Mujahidin" - a term used to describe those they see as Muslims who
struggle in the path of Allah - prompting the families of female students to
leave the city and keep their daughters away from schools.
It was reported
earlier this year that women, referred to as "muhajirat" – immigrants
in the name of religion – were being recruited by the Islamic State for
marriage purposes. But according to reports, sexual abuse is rife.
Some are married
with families, but others are young and single, and serve as a potential
attraction to manipulate young men interested in siding with the militant
rebels.
Yet female
fighters for the al-Khansa battalion perform other tasks, including street
patrols and public floggings for Sharia crimes. Others are recruited as
roadblock guards, or carry out a violent coercion regime against women who fail
to adhere to the strict Islamic ideology of IS.
Female fighters
joining the IS are yet another setback in the fight for women's rights,
specifically in Syria – a country ravaged by a civil war that has killed more
than 100,000. The militants continue to advance across the state, with
activists stating the group has taken control of several towns in the northern
province of Aleppo, a significant expansion for the organisation.
Women played a
central role in the Arab Spring when the revolution erupted in Syria in March
2011. Yet three years after the uprisings, hopes that the revolts would bring
greater freedom and expanded rights for women have been thwarted by entrenched
patriarchal structures and the rise of militant Islamist organisations.
In 2013, a Thomson
Reuters Foundation poll of 22 Arab countries showed three out of five states
involved in the Arab Spring came last for women's rights, in terms of gender
violence, treatment of women in the family, inclusion in politics and economics
and reproductive rights.
And with women
pledging their support for militant jihadist groups, it seems that improving
the status of female Syrians is further away than ever.
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http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/islamic-states-women-warriors-how-fierce-al-khansa-battalion-was-borne-out-repression-1461016
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