German girl, 16, who ran away from home to join ISIS captured in the ruins of war-torn Mosul ‘was a SNIPER’ for the terror group
She was among 20 jihadis seized after the Iraqi city fell following a ten month battle
A 16-year-old German schoolgirl who ran away from home to join ISIS before being captured in the ruins of Mosul - was reportedly a SNIPER for the terror group.
Linda Wenzel was tracked down by Iraqi troops along with four other German women hiding in a tunnel, in the old part of the Iraqi city during a sweep.
Pictures shared on social media show the girl being escorted by Iraqi security forces after they discovered her alive under rubble.
She looks pale, afraid and covered in dust, unveiled but wearing a colourful scarf around her neck.
She was initially mistaken for a kidnapped Yazidi girl because of her lack of Arabic.
Reports from the battlefront claim Iraqi forces state she was a sharpshooter for her ISIS warlords, claims .
Wenzel from the town of Pulsnitz near Dresden fled a year ago after flying from Frankfurt to Turkey before making her way to Syria.
She then quickly fell in with an ISIS offshoot group before being smuggled into Iraq.
Radicalised in Germany, she changed her name to Mariam and sometimes posted photos of herself on her Facebook page wearing a headscarf.
Friends of the teen told police she had suddenly started learning Arabic, taking the Koran to school, wearing conservative clothing and becoming fascinated with Islam before she disappeared.
It was also reported she may have fallen in love with a Muslim boy she met online.
Authorities in Germany, who listed her as a potential terror suspect after her disappearance, confirmed they are examining the new photos to make sure it is actually her.
However, respected newspaper Die Welt, citing security sources, said the captive girl is definitely the missing schoolgirl.
She was among 20 ISIS followers seized after the city fell following a ten month battle which left 25,000 jihadists dead and Iraq's second largest city a sea of devastation.
She was caught in a tunnel system in Mosul with other women, some wearing suicide vests and carrying automatic weapons.
Reports said they worked for the ISIS police force in the city.
Also seized during military mopping-up operations last Thursday were women from Russia, Turkey, Canada and Chechnya.
"There are new findings in the criminal investigation that are being tested," said chief prosecutor Lorenz Haase.
"When she is clearly identified, the investigation will be resumed."
Wenzel was said to be unhappy at home when she turned to Islam.
She soon began engaging with ISIS followers in the Middle East in internet chat rooms and was under the observation of German intelligence officials who suspected her of plotting a serious crime against the state when she fled abroad.
MOST READ IN WORLD NEWS
When her mother first noticed she was missing last year the teenager had already flown to Turkey and vanished.
Wenzel's mother said in July last year: "When she did not come back and then I found out she had never even been there, I called the police.
"In her room they found a print of a plane ticket to Istanbul under the mattress. I was shocked, my daughter has never stolen or lied about anything before.
"She got a proper brainwashing I hope we can get her back."