Islamic
State militants have publicly crucified and murdered a teenager they
accused of taking photographs of the terror group's headquarters in
Syria.
Sickening
images purportedly taken in the central square of the extremists' de
facto capital Raqqa show the battered and bloodstained body of an
unnamed 17-year-old boy strapped to a cross.
A
handwritten placard hangs around the teenager's neck, accusing him of
'apostasy' - the abandonment of his religion - and says he had been
crucified for three days after being caught receiving 500 Turkish lira
for every photograph he took of an Islamic State military base.
The
image of the murdered teenager appeared on a social media account of an
activist group known as Raqqa is Being Slaughtered Silently.
The
group is made up of a handful of incredibly brave individuals who
oppose ISIS and - despite the city being the group's de facto, the
centre of its leadership and full of bloodthirsty religious police -
attempt to document the violence the terrorists group has brought to
their hometown.
The
image has been circulated on Twitter both by anti-ISIS campaigners and
by ISIS supporters, who sickeningly trumpet it as a positive example of
the group's brutal interpretation of Islam.
Charlie
Winter, programs officer at counter-extremism think tank the Quilliam
Foundation, said crucifixion is a prescribed punishment meted out by
Isis for specific crimes.
'Crucifixion
has been used many times before – it's an age-old punishment dealt out
to people who have committed treason,' he told The Independent.
The
Islamic State's use of crucifixion as a punishment stems from
its fundamentalist interpretation of Verse 33 of the fifth book of the
Koran.
The
verse reads: 'Indeed, the penalty for those who wage war against Allah
and His Messenger and strive upon earth [to cause] corruption is none
but that they be killed or crucified or that their hands and feet be cut
off from opposite sides or that they be exiled from the land.'
'That is for them a disgrace in this world; and for them in the Hereafter is a great punishment.'
Despite
this, ISIS chooses to ignore the next passage which emphasises
forgiveness and removes the imperative to use such a punishment, saying:
'Except for those who return [repenting] before you apprehend them. And
know that Allah is Forgiving and Merciful.'
Severed
heads are regularly displayed impaled on spikes surrounding a small
patch of grass in the square, and there are a number of wooden and metal
crosses standing ready for the next execution.
Raqqa's central square has been bathed in blood since the terror group fully seized control of the city earlier in the year.
Source: Daily Mail
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