‘ISIS fanatic’ wandering so freely around Germany that freed Yazidi sex slave ‘he once held captive’ BUMPED INTO HIM
The 19-year-old's 'tormentor' also had refugee status, and claimed to know where she lived
The 19-year-old's 'tormentor' also had refugee status, and claimed to know where she lived
AN 'ISIS fanatic' was allowed to wander Germany so freely he bumped into a refugee teen he once held captive as a slave, it was claimed this week.
The victim, 19-year-old Ashwaq Ta’lo, has now fled to Kurdistan because she says she is in fear of her life and feels safer in the Middle East.
The Yazidi woman talked about the terrifying Stuttgart encounter to Bas News, a Kurdish news agency, recounting how her alleged tormentor, who she knew as Abu Humam, said he knew where she lived.
After reporting him to cops, authorities said the man also had refugee status, and without compelling evidence there was nothing that could be done.
Ta’lo was only 15 when her family was rounded up by Isis four years ago.
She was held captive and eventually sold, along with her sister and other young women and teenage girls.
A man bought her for £78 at an auction in Iraq.
He took her back to Syria, and she was forced to convert to Islam.
She was made to pray five times a day and learn the Koran.
Ta’lo complied to avoid being harmed, but said Humam abused her every day for 10 months regardless.
After escaping she faced a 14-hour walk before finding safe refuge.
She made it to Germany as a refugee, and was reunited with her mother and some of her lost family members.
The teen lived there for three years.
She first thought she had seen Humam in 2016, but convinced herself it was not him.
Then in February she said she bumped into him again on the streets of Stuttgart.
She told Bas News: "I froze when I looked at his face carefully.
"It was Abu Humam, with the same scary beard and ugly face."
The recalled what he said: "You're Ashwaq, aren't you?
"I am Abu Humam and you were with me for a while in Mosul.
"And I know where you live, with whom you live, and what you are doing."
Ta’lo ran and told her brother, an asylum official and the police about the incident.
Cops identified the man from CCTV footage but told her that there was nothing they could do — he was also a registered refugee.
Compelling evidence is needed to prosecute Syrian refugees.
Now living with her father in Kurdistan, Ta’lo says she cannot bear the thought of returning to Germany.
The terrified teen said: “I will never go back."
Many young Yazidis are still in Isis captivity, including Ta'lo's sister.
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