Instead, its fighters pushed into rebel-held areas in Syria and tried to dominate other rebels, often clashing with them for control and imposing the group’s strict law wherever they could.
It didn’t yet hold the large stretches of territory across both countries that it would capture the next year. I am sure he is the one who gave my name to Daesh,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for the Islamic State group.Īt that time, in mid-2013, IS had just started to spread from neighboring Iraq into Syria. “He knew everything about me, such as being secular and gay. Halaby says a childhood friend who became radicalized and joined IS betrayed him to the militants in 2013, forcing him to flee his home city of Aleppo. The man spoke on condition that he be identified as Daniel Halaby, the name he now uses in his activism tracking IS atrocities, and that the city in Turkey where he lives not be named for his own safety. Syrian rebel factions have killed or abused gays as well.Ī 26-year-old Syrian gay man told the AP that even two years after fleeing to Turkey, he wakes up shaken by nightmares that he is about to be hurled from a building. Some in the public who might be shocked by other IS atrocities say killings of gays is justified. Even among IS opponents, gays find little sympathy. Islamic State group fighters sometimes torture suspected homosexuals to reveal their friends’ names and search their laptops and mobile phones. Gay men are haunted constantly by the possibility that someone, perhaps even a relative, will betray them to the militants - whether to curry favor with IS or simply out of hatred for their sexual orientation. Many Muslims consider homosexuality to be sinful. The fear of a horrific death among gay men under Islamic State rule is further compounded by their isolation in a deeply conservative society that largely shuns them. At least 36 men in Syria and Iraq have been killed by IS militants on charges of sodomy, according to the New York-based OutRight Action International, though its Middle East and North Africa coordinator, Hossein Alizadeh, said it was not possible to confirm the sexual orientation of the victims. Videos it has released show masked militants dangling men over the precipices of buildings by their legs to drop them head-first or tossing them over the edge. Notorious for their gruesome methods of killing, the Islamic State group reserves one of its most brutal for suspected homosexuals. They led them to the roof of the four-story hotel, according to the witness, who spoke in the Turkish city of Reyhanli on condition he be identified only by his first name, Omar, for fear of reprisals. Other masked extremists tied the men’s hands behind their backs and blindfolded them. “Take them and throw them off,” the judge ordered. The second man, 21-year-old Mohammed Salameh, pleaded for a chance to repent, promising never to have sex with a man again, according to a witness among the onlookers that sunny July morning who gave The Associated Press a rare firsthand account. “I’d prefer it if you shoot me in the head,” 32-year-old Hawas Mallah replied helplessly. Death, the judge told him, would help cleanse him of his sin. He asked one of the men if he was satisfied with the sentence.
2 and was part of a 2015 AP series of stories, “Inside the Caliphate,” which explored life under Islamic State rule.īefore a crowd of men on a street in the Syrian city of Palmyra, the masked Islamic State group judge read out the sentence against the two men convicted of homosexuality: They would be thrown to their deaths from the roof of the nearby Wael Hotel. The Associated Press is reproducing an article on IS treatment of gays that initially ran on Dec.