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SEX SLAVE MANUAL

Vile ISIS pamphlet has rules for terrorist paedophiles about owning ‘concubines’ – including kids

'You cannot have penetrative sex but you can still enjoy them'

A HORRIFYING ISIS pamphlet that lays down the law for owning sex slaves - including children - has been uncovered after a village near Mosul was liberated from the terror group.

The bright pink and red pamphlet includes 32 questions and answers on how to deal with female captives.

 Khalida, 25, who escaped from Islamic State after beeing sold as a sex slave
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Khalida, 25, who escaped from Islamic State after beeing sold as a sex slaveCredit: News Group Newspapers Ltd

"Pre-pubescent girls can be taken as concubines. You cannot have penetrative sex but you can still enjoy them," according to the leaflet.

"Non-Muslim women can be taken as concubines.

"Militants can own two sisters as concubines but only have sex with one," the leaflet added.

One question in the pamphlet asks whether a group of militants can share a concubine. The answer: only a single owner can sleep with a concubine.

A senior ISIS cleric has the authority to distribute female captives among its fighters, it said.

The documents and other materials, printed with Islamic State logos, were found by the Reuters news agency in offices used by the group until a few days ago.

 An Iraqi soldier shows a pamphlet which reads "Wearing beards is compulsory, shaving is prohibited"
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An Iraqi soldier shows a pamphlet which reads "Wearing beards is compulsory, shaving is prohibited"Credit: Reuters

Members of the Iraqi forces told Reuters the documents originated from Islamic State, although this could not be independently verified.

After blazing through northern Iraq, Islamic State took hundreds of women from the Yazidi minority as sex slaves.

Under Islamic State's rules, women were required to largely stay at home or wear head-to-toe black coverings if they ventured out.

 Iraqi forces have liberated large parts of the area around Mosul
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Iraqi forces have liberated large parts of the area around MosulCredit: Barcroft Media

After Islamic State conquered villages in northern Iraq, it spelled out in minute detail the rules of its self-proclaimed caliphate, from beard length to alms to guidelines for taking women as sex slaves.

Men wore short trousers which were deemed Islamic along with beards of appropriate length.

ISIS documents and posters, obtained in villages captured by Iraqi forces, highlight a tight and comprehensive system of rule by the militants, who went to great lengths to explain their extremist philosophy.

There were few forms of entertainment under Islamic State, which banned the internet and music along with cell phones.

A ban on satellite dishes deprived Iraqis of news of the outside world. In a huge slick poster, entitled "Why I Should Destroy My Dish", the jihadists provided 20 reasons, revolving mostly around the immorality of satellite television programs.

 These ISIS militants joked about sex slaves
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These ISIS militants joked about sex slavesCredit: YouTube

The reasons include: "Because satellite channels show stories of love and naked women and inappropriate language" and "Because satellite channels normalise men being effeminate and sissies."
Iraqi security forces and Kurdish peshmerga fighters have seized several villages and towns during an offensive against the northern city of Mosul, Islamic State's last stronghold in the country.

When Islamic State swept through the north in 2014, it announced a self-proclaimed caliphate, which appealed to some fellow Sunnis who felt marginalized by the Shi'ite-led central government.

But that appeal faded as Islamic State enforced its medieval thinking with brute force, beheading anyone deemed an opponent.

Slick, colorful posters, pamphlets and documents highlight Islamic State's intense focus on dictating what it called proper Islamic behaviour for the citizens of its 'caliphate'.

Violations of its rules meant punishment such as public whipping or being hauled off to Mosul for execution, according to several villagers who recently escaped from Islamic State areas.

A green wallet-size insert lays out guidelines for how to pray properly. It shows a young boy undertaking ablutions. "Wash your feet from the direction of your toes down to your heels," it said.

A five-page pamphlet with pictures of gold bracelets, diamond rings and wheat on the front spelled out instructions on how to give alms, an obligation under Islam. Failure to do so would mean a penalty.

 ISIS is on the run in Iraq. File picture
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ISIS is on the run in Iraq. File pictureCredit: Reuters

In the village of Shura, where seven Islamic State suicide bombers were recently shot dead as they rushed toward Iraqi forces, militants kept meticulous records of who had given alms. Entries showed whether an individual owned gold, property or a car. Monthly salaries were also noted.

Unlike al Qaeda, its predecessor in Iraq, Islamic State made its name in the jihadi world by becoming the first militant group to capture significant amounts of land in the Middle East, hold it and then set up an administration.

But air strikes by a U.S.-led coalition targeting Islamic State's leaders and its sources of income have dealt a major blow to the caliphate.

Islamic State's inclination to codify its system of rule extended to what it called the spoils of war.

One of the pamphlets begins by defining a beard as "hair that grows on your face and your cheeks".

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