A Swedish teenager rescued from Islamic State militants in Iraq has said life in the so-called caliphate was "really hard" and that she was duped into going there by her boyfriend.
In her first
interview since Kurdish special forces recovered her in northern Iraq,
the 16-year old told a Kurdish TV channel she had met her boyfriend in
mid-2014 after dropping out of school in Sweden.
"First
we were good but then he started to look at ISIS videos and speak about
them and stuff like that," she told Kurdistan 24 in a brief interview,
using another name for the Islamic State group.
"Then
he said he wanted to go to ISIS and I said ok, no problem, because I
didn't know what ISIS means, what Islam is -- nothing," said the girl.
The
couple set off from Sweden in late May 2015 and made their way across
Europe by bus and train until reaching the Turkish border province of
Gaziantep, from which they crossed into Syria.
From
there, Islamic State militants ferried them by bus with other men and
women to the city of Mosul in neighboring Iraq and provided them with a
house. There was no electricity or running water.
"I
didn't have any money either - it was a really hard life," she said,
looking relaxed and healthy. "When I had a phone I started to contact my
mum and I said 'I want to go home'."
The teenager, who was
rescued on Feb. 17, is currently in Iraq's Kurdistan region and will be
handed over to Swedish authorities.Security services estimate that hundreds of Western men and women have left home to join Islamic State since the group overran large parts of Iraq and Syria in June 2014.
A mother who took her 14-month-old son to Syria to join Islamic State fighters was jailed for six years by a British court earlier this month.
Smiling
occasionally, the girl compared life under Islamic State to that in
Europe: "In Sweden we have everything, and when I was there, we didn't
have anything".
Source: Reuters
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