ISIS capital in Syria is 'like a big prison,' activist says
The fight against ISIS
Story highlights
- "We are trying to save our city," an activist tells CNN's Brooke Baldwin
- Abu Ibrahim al-Raqqawi describes forced marriages and blood donations
(CNN)It's not hard to get into Raqqa. The problem, one prominent activist tells CNN, is getting out.
Abu
Ibrahim al-Raqqawi's voice is calm and measured as he describes life
inside the city ISIS claims as the capital of its so-called caliphate.
But the horrors he details are harrowing.
Airstrikes. Executions. Forced blood donations and marriages to ISIS fighters.
Al-Raqqawi
isn't his real name. It's the identity the former medical student who
helped found an activist group called "Raqqa is Being Slaughtered
Silently" uses to speak out. ISIS fighters have already tortured and
executed one member of the group, he says, and they've made it clear
they want the others involved dead.
Still, al-Raqqawi tells CNN's Brooke Baldwin that won't stop him from sharing what he sees.
"I
lost my life ... I don't have school. I don't have a future. I don't
have anything, but I didn't want that for me or for my city," he says.
"It's the situation forcing me to do this. I don't want to be famous. I
don't want everybody to know who I am or what I'm doing. It's just for
my city and for my family and for the innocent civilians. ... We are
trying our best. We are trying to save our city."
Here's
a look at some of the things al-Raqqawi has told CNN he and others from
the activist group have seen in Raqqa. CNN hasn't independently
confirmed his claims, but his account provides a rare glimpse into the dramatic transformation of a city once known as one of Syria's most liberal.
Dozens executed
In
two months at least 40 people have been executed in Raqqa, al-Raqqawi
says, for charges including being a fighter for the Free Syrian Army,
being gay or killing others. Activists, he says, are also targeted.
"If you are an activist...inside the city of Raqqa, it will take you to death," he says.
Forced blood donation
In
Raqqa, al-Raqqawi says, a day might start out with a trip to court over
a home robbery, and end up with a forced blood donation.
"If
you have anything in the Islamic court, they say, 'Go to the hospital
and donate your blood and bring me the receipt, and if you don't have
it, I can't help you," he says. "They say to you, 'We can't help you
until you go to the hospital. There (are) a lot of airstrikes, a lot of
injured ISIS fighters.'"
Women forced into marriages
For
women, al-Raqqawi says, the city is "like a big prison." They are not
allowed to leave the city if they are younger than 45 years old. And he
says his activist group has documented more than 270 cases of girls
forced to marry ISIS fighters.
"ISIS
fighters are really sex-mad. ... Some of them have two and three wives,
and even with that they are trying to find slaves from Yazidi girls," he
says.
Buildings get an unexpected facelift
An
effort to repaint buildings in bright colors isn't what you'd expect to
see in a square known as the site of executions, beheadings and
crucifixions. But al-Raqqawi says that's just what happened in Raqqa
several weeks ago.
The change is
particularly notable, he says, because when ISIS first came to the city
they painted buildings black. Now, al-Raqqawi says the fresh coats of
pink, white, gold and green paint could be a sign that ISIS is trying to
make buildings less of a target for coalition airstrikes.
Foreign fighters flood city
"There
is a big wall between the civilians and foreign fighters. It's like two
different lives inside the city of Raqqa," al-Raqqawi says. "Yes it's
heaven for some of these foreign fighters, because they give them a lot
of money. They give them the fancy houses. They give them the fancy
cars."
But for some, it's not the
paradise they imagined, al-Raqqawi says. Rumors swirl, he says, about
foreign fighters being killed after trying to defect.
"ISIS
takes their passports and if anyone tries defection from this, they
will kill them immediately," he says. "The problem, it's not how to go
inside the city of Raqqa. The problem is how to get out."
Comments
Post a Comment