AFP |
A German woman who joined the Islamic State jihadist group goes on trial Tuesday accused of the war crime of letting a five-year-old “slave” girl die of thirst. Prominent London-based human rights lawyer Amal Clooney is part of the team representing the dead Yazidi girl’s mother, but Clooney was not expected to appear in the Munich trial on Tuesday.
The defendant, identified only as Jennifer W., 27, faces life in jail if found guilty of committing a war crime, murder, membership in a terrorist organisation and weapons offences. According to news weekly Der Spiegel, the defendant, herself the mother of a small girl, had incriminated herself while talking at length to an undercover FBI informant in a bugged car.
When she left the mission, she was arrested by Turkish security services and extradited several days later to Germany.
German prosecutors allege her IS husband had purchased the Yazidi child and her mother — a co-plaintiff in the trial — as household “slaves” whom they held captive while living in then IS-occupied Mosul, Iraq, in 2015. “After the girl fell ill and wet her mattress, the husband of the accused chained her up outside as punishment and let the child die an agonising death of thirst in the scorching heat,” prosecutors charge.
“The accused allowed her husband to do so and did nothing to save the girl.” German media said the defendant’s husband, Taha Sabah Noori Al-J., had beaten both the Yazidi mother and child, and that Jennifer W. allegedly also once held a pistol to the woman’s head.
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The trial will start at 0730 GMT under tight security in a Munich court that deals with state security and terrorism cases, with hearings initially scheduled until September 30.
FBI Informant
Jennifer W., who reportedly left school after the eighth grade and converted to Islam in 2013, left Germany in August 2014 and travelled via Turkey and Syria to Iraq where she joined the IS. Recruited in mid-2015 to an “anti-vice squad” of the group’s self-styled Hisba morality police, she patrolled city parks in IS-occupied Fallujah and Mosul.
Armed with an AK-47 assault rifle, a pistol and an explosives vest, her task was to ensure that women complied with IS behaviour and clothing regulations, said prosecutors. In January 2016, months after the Yazidi child’s death, Jennifer W. visited the German embassy in Ankara to apply for new identity papers.
The trial will start at 0730 GMT under tight security in a Munich court that deals with state security and terrorism cases, with hearings initially scheduled until September 30.
When she left the mission, she was arrested by Turkish security services and extradited several days later to Germany. For lack of actionable evidence against her at the time, she was allowed to return to her home in the German state of Lower Saxony, but quickly sought to return to IS territory.
Der Spiegel reported that an FBI informant had posed as an accomplice who offered to take Jennifer W. back to the IS “caliphate”, and who chatted with her in a bugged car while they drove through Germany. Jennifer W. allegedly said that the death of the little girl had been “hard-core even for the IS” and unjust because only God had the right to use fire as punishment.
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Her husband had later been beaten as punishment by the IS, she said. Police followed close behind her vehicle for several hours and listened to a live audio feed as Jennifer W. spoke and then arrested her at a highway stop.
Clooney, the wife of Hollywood star George Clooney, has been involved in a campaign with Nobel Peace Prize winner Nadia Murad, a former IS sex slave, to have the IS crimes against the Yazidi minority be recognised as a “genocide”.
© Agence France-Presse