ZitatVictims of ISIS in the Yazidi community now living in the Netherlands are outraged that a serious discussion is taking place in that European country about the possible return of ISIS women. Last Wednesday, two women, who traveled to the ISIS radical caliphate several years ago, visited the Dutch embassy in Ankara. The Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs says that they told personnel they want to "return home."
Another group of ISIS women and their children went to court in an attempt to force the Dutch government to "take them" from a Kurdish prison camp in Northern Syria.
Dutch public channel the NOS (link in Dutch) reports that this news has the Yazidi community in the Netherlands up in arms. They are utterly dismayed that the plans of the ISIS Brides, as they are known, are actually taken seriously. "The ISIS women were worse than the fighters," 21-year-old Parween Alhinto told the public broadcaster. "They regularly used violence against the imprisoned [Yazidi] women and helped the fighters rape them."
Parween knows of what she speaks. Male ISIS terrorists took her captive and held her for four long months, during which they raped her regularly. Her ten-year-old sister was sold as a sex slave to someone in Syria. "She lived there in a house with ISIS women," Parween says. "My sister told me afterward that the women were even worse than the fighters."
The entire notion that European countries may be forced to take back ISIS women is, of course, horrendous, but what makes this even worse is the fact that a Belgian court already ruled this week that the Belgian government had to go and get an ISIS bride and her two children from a "prison camp." The government has 75 days to do so. And earlier this summer, a German court forced the German government to take back an ISIS woman and her three children