Iraq crisis: As the Sunni terror spreads, its fighters look for wives
Sunday, June 22, 2014
The Iraqi army and the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (Isis) are battling for control of Iraqs largest refinery outside Baiji north of Baghdad, with each side holding part of the complex. But in the town of Baiji itself, a few miles away, which is completely under the control of Isis, residents say they are most frightened by Isis militants going door to door asking about the numbers of married and unmarried women in the house.
I told them that there were only two women in the house and both were married, said Abu Lahid. They said that many of their mujahedin [fighters] were unmarried and wanted a wife. They insisted on coming into my house to look at the womens ID cards [which in Iraq show marital status].
Isis says its men have been ordered not to bother local people if they are Sunni, but in many places they are imposing their puritanical social norms in the towns they have captured. In Mosul people were at first jubilant that Isis had removed the checkpoints that for years had made movement in the city very slow.
Merchants and farmers were ordered to reduce the prices of their goods. But tolerance and moderation on the part of Isis is intermittent and may be temporary. In one case in Mosul a woman was reportedly whipped, along with her husband, because she was only wearing a headscarf rather than the niqqab cloak covering the whole body. In some captured towns fanatical Isis militants start imposing rules about womens clothing, watching TV in coffee shops and cigarette smoking almost before the fighting is ended.
http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/middle-east/iraq-crisis-as-the-sunni-terror-spreads-its-fighters-look-for-wives-9554231.html