In Suruç, a town in Turkey merely 10km from Kobani, refugees shared harrowing testimony with Amnesty International about their abduction by IS. © ARIS MESSINIS/AFP/Getty Images
Posted
on 7 November 2014 by News Team
By Noor
Al-Bazzaz of Amnesty International’s Syria team
Five
months to the day after being abducted and held hostage by the armed group
calling itself Islamic State (IS), a group of 25 students from Kobani were
unexpectedly set free on 29 October.
They were
the last remaining captives from a group of around 150 schoolchildren from the
embattled Kurdish-majority city in northern Syria who were returning from their
final year examinations in Aleppo in May when IS members stopped their school
bus at a checkpoint and abducted them all. In the months that followed, they
were sporadically released. Those we spoke to had horror stories to tell about
life in IS captivity.
In Suruç,
a town in Turkey merely 10km from Kobani, refugees from the besieged city told
me how the students’ harrowing experience was typical of the many abductions by
IS in the year and a half since the armed group besieged their city.
One of the
released students, a 15-year-old boy who chose to remain unnamed, described the
four months he spent in the hands of IS, detailing the armed group’s use of
torture against students who broke the rigid rules, or attempted to escape.
As well as
being compelled to attend daily “religious lessons”, the students were expected
to follow a strict list of rules that included sleeping by 10pm, remaining in
their rooms at all times except at prayer time, and being quiet. Those found
breaking the rules were punished, often with beatings.
“The
school in Manbej where we were held had two floors; we were kept on the upper
floor and the fighters slept on the bottom floor. We were all frightened of the
bottom floor; there was a room there that they called the ‘torture room’. That
is where they took down students who misbehaved and beat them; it’s also the
room that had all the torture equipment, like the electricity, the hosepipes
and the ropes.
“Those of
us who were caught trying to escape were beaten upstairs, in front of the other
students. I think this was a warning to the other students, but I don’t think
it worked. We all believed we were never going to be released, so while it was
terrifying to watch the beatings, it only took a few days to get over the fear
and for a few of the boys to try to escape again.
“I tried
to escape, and was caught with three other boys. They hung me from the ceiling
from my wrists for around half an hour.
“Then they
beat us in front of everyone; there were three of them beating the three of us.
They used their hands, legs and hosepipes. I was then taken downstairs and
given electric shocks. They attached tongs to my fingers and turned the electricity
on five times.”
The use of
electricity, and the practice of being hung from the ceiling by the wrists,
often referred to as shabah, have both been documented extensively in prisons
and detention centres in Syria and are believed to be commonly practised by
members of Bashar al-Assad’s security and intelligence services.
According
to the released student, he witnessed a friend being taken to an IS-run
hospital after a beating. The boy reportedly sustained a number of serious head
injuries before collapsing.
“He looked
dizzy and he suddenly fell to the ground. He was taken straight away by the
fighters to a hospital and was returned three days later, but he was not
normal. He barely moved for around 20 days after that; he only spoke. He began
to move slowly just before he was released.
“I wish no
one ever falls into these people’s hands. Some of the students used to faint
from fear after watching the beatings they carried out to punish those of us
who misbehaved or tried to run away, so you can imagine how brutal they were. I
wish no one has to go through that again.”
His
quivering voice was a reminder that this 15-year-old boy, like the scores of
other abducted students, was just a child.
For those
whose relatives remain in IS custody, these stories, as well as the group’s own
propaganda videos, work only to heighten alarm and fear as they await news of
their loved ones’ fates.
Only
several days before the last group of students were released, “Omar”, the
father of one of the boys who was still in captivity, told me about the
uncertainty and fear that he and his wife were living with:
“We are
afraid to raise the alarm, we are afraid to highlight our son’s captivity in
the media. No one knows how this group functions, or how they might react. They
are completely unpredictable.”
Indeed,
just a few days later, Omar’s son was released along with the remaining
students.
Following
his son’s release I called Omar to congratulate him. He said he did not know
why his son was held for so long, or why he was released, only that the
experience had left its mark on their family:
“When you
have a child it is human instinct to do everything you can to protect them.
That is how I felt; I was prepared to do everything to get my son back, but was
unable to do anything. That was so very painful.
“I am a
strong person, but even I couldn’t keep it together when I saw him again. His
mother would not let him go, she held on to him and cried for 15 minutes.”
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