The Iraqi housewife who 'cooked the heads' of ISIS fighters
Shirqat, Iraq (CNN)"Shut
up and stay still," the woman in black fatigues and a black headscarf
snapped over her shoulder at the armed men behind her as she sat down
for an interview.
Immediately they went quiet, each adjusting his weapon and standing up straight as if he'd been called to attention.
This is a woman who commands respect, I
thought. She keeps a Beretta 9-millimeter pistol in a holster under her
left arm. The area around the trigger was silver where the paint had
worn off.
The woman in question,
39-year-old Wahida Mohamed -- better known as Um Hanadi -- leads a force
of around 70 men in the area of Shirqat, a town 50 miles (80
kilometers) south of Mosul, Iraq.
She and her men, part of a tribal militia, recently helped government forces drive ISIS out of the town.
In the man's world that is rural Iraq, female fighters are a rarity.
Um Hanadi is not new to this.
"I
began fighting the terrorists in 2004, working with Iraqi security
forces and the coalition," she says. As a result, she attracted the
wrath of what eventually became al Qaeda in Mesopotamia, which later
morphed into ISIS.
"I received
threats from the top leadership of ISIS, including from Abu Bakr
(al-Baghdadi) himself," she says, referring to ISIS's self-declared
caliph.
"But I refused."
"I'm at the top of their most wanted list," she brags, "even more than the Prime Minister."
Um Hanadi ticks off the times they planted car bombs outside her home. "2006, 2009, 2010, three car bombs in 2013 and in 2014."
Along
the way, her first husband was killed in action. She remarried, but
ISIS killed her second husband earlier this year. ISIS also killed her
father and three brothers. They also killed, she added, her sheep, her
dogs and her birds.
She narrowly escaped death as well.
"Six times they tried to assassinate me," she says. "I have shrapnel in my head and legs, and my ribs were broken."
She pulled back her headscarf to show her scars.
"But all that didn't stop me from fighting," she said.
Um
Hanadi claims to have led her men in multiple battles against ISIS.
General Jamaa Anad, the commander of ground forces in her native
Salahuddin province, told me they had provided her group with vehicles
and weapons.
General Anad, a short, compact, no-nonsense man of few words, simply says: "She lost her brothers and husbands as martyrs."
After listing all the attacks against
her, and all the loved ones lost to ISIS, Um Hanadi said: "I fought
them. I beheaded them. I cooked their heads, I burned their bodies."
She made no excuses, nor attempted to rationalize this. It was delivered as a boast, not a confession.
"This is all documented," she said. "You can see it on my Facebook page."
So we checked. Among many pictures of her with her dead husbands,
fighters and generals, there was a photo of her in the same black combat
fatigues and headscarf holding what appeared to be a freshly severed
head. Another showed two severed heads in a cooking pot. In a third
photograph, she is standing among partially-burned corpses. It's
impossible to verify whether the photos are authentic or Photoshopped,
but we got the point.
Um
Hanadi describes herself as a "rabat manzal" -- a housewife. She denied
media reports she was a hairdresser, although a photo on her Facebook
page shows her without a headscarf, in what appears to be a hair salon.
She has two daughters, aged 22 and 20. They are trained and ready to
fight, she says, but are busy at the moment taking care of their
children.
When we finished the
interview, Um Hanadi's entourage prepared to board their pickup trucks. I
walked up to one of the trucks, where three men sat in the front seat.
One pulled out a hand grenade.
"This is for Daesh," he said, using the derogatory term for ISIS.
"And
so is this -- to cut off their heads," said the driver, pulling a long
machete off the dashboard and brandishing it uncomfortably close to my
face.
Source : CNN
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