Earlier this month, Souhayla walked out of Mosul, Iraq. After 3 years of captivity and serial rape, the 16-year-old was free — her Islamic State captor was killed in an airstrike. Her uncle, Khalid Taalo, posted her photo on Facebook with a description of what #ISIS had done to her. And both Souhayla and her family asked that @nytimes identify her in an effort to shed light on their community’s suffering. Since the operation to take back #Mosul began last year, about 180 women, girls and children from the #Yazidi ethnic minority who were captured by ISIS in 2014 have been liberated. Now many of them sleep for days on end. Souhayla is being nursed back to health by her uncle. She lies on her side on a mattress, unable to hold up her head. She can barely swallow water. And her voice is so weak that Khalid places his ear directly over her mouth to hear her. In the first 2 years of her captivity, Souhayla was raped by 7 men. When the push for Mosul began, she was moved deeper into the area hardest hit by the conflict. And as ISIS began losing its grip on the city, her captor cut her hair short, like a boy’s, with hopes of slipping her past Iraqi security forces. Now, “I’m happy to be home,” Souhayla whispered with difficulty into her uncle’s ear, in response to a question from our reporter Rukmini Callimachi, “but I’m sick.” @alexkpotter took this portrait of Souhayla outside her uncle’s tent in Shariya Camp, Iraq.

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ニューヨーク・タイムズのインスタグラム(nytimes) - 7月27日 21時52分


Earlier this month, Souhayla walked out of Mosul, Iraq. After 3 years of captivity and serial rape, the 16-year-old was free — her Islamic State captor was killed in an airstrike. Her uncle, Khalid Taalo, posted her photo on Facebook with a description of what #ISIS had done to her. And both Souhayla and her family asked that @ニューヨーク・タイムズ identify her in an effort to shed light on their community’s suffering. Since the operation to take back #Mosul began last year, about 180 women, girls and children from the #Yazidi ethnic minority who were captured by ISIS in 2014 have been liberated. Now many of them sleep for days on end. Souhayla is being nursed back to health by her uncle. She lies on her side on a mattress, unable to hold up her head. She can barely swallow water. And her voice is so weak that Khalid places his ear directly over her mouth to hear her. In the first 2 years of her captivity, Souhayla was raped by 7 men. When the push for Mosul began, she was moved deeper into the area hardest hit by the conflict. And as ISIS began losing its grip on the city, her captor cut her hair short, like a boy’s, with hopes of slipping her past Iraqi security forces. Now, “I’m happy to be home,” Souhayla whispered with difficulty into her uncle’s ear, in response to a question from our reporter Rukmini Callimachi, “but I’m sick.” @alexkpotter took this portrait of Souhayla outside her uncle’s tent in Shariya Camp, Iraq.


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