IS showing compassion amid killing during Ramadan

ISLAMIC State is showing its cruel and compassionate sides during the Muslim holy month of Ramadan.
A Syrian refugee girl shelters at a refugee camp south of Beirut after her family fled to Lebanon. Picture:AFP/Getty ImagesA Syrian refugee girl shelters at a refugee camp south of Beirut after her family fled to Lebanon. Picture:AFP/Getty Images
A Syrian refugee girl shelters at a refugee camp south of Beirut after her family fled to Lebanon. Picture:AFP/Getty Images

The IS group is treating the millions who live under its rule in Iraq and Syria to food and alms if they are poor to tout their adherence to the month’s spirit of compassion while meting out sharp punishment to anyone caught breaking the daily fast.

The double approach reflects the policy that the extremist group has followed ever since it overran large parts of the two countries and declared a “caliphate” in its territory last year. It has sought to build public support by providing services and acting as a functioning government, even as it imposes its strict version of Islamic law through violence.

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In the Iraqi city of Mosul, the biggest city under IS rule, those who break the fast can be punished by being put in a cage in a public square for hours or for several days, said one resident Omar.

In parts of Syria, violators are tied to a wooden cross in public, according to the Syrian Observatory for Human Rights, which monitors the situation in the country. Other residents and activists reported people being flogged.

Ramadan, which began in mid-June and ends next week, is a time when Muslims around the world seek to be closer to God, refraining from food, water, smoking and sex from dawn to sunset, offering extra prayers, reading the Koran, showing charity for the poor and cementing friendships and family ties. The atmosphere is normally festive after sunset, with families out visiting each other or gathering at street cafes, playing backgammon, cards or smoking waterpipes.

In the IS-ruled city of Fallujah in western Iraq, residents have been told by the group’s authorities not to gather at coffee shops — and anyway, smoking and games are banned.

IS has also ordered men to observe a modest dress code during Ramadan, meaning no sleeveless shirts or shorts, common attire for Iraqi men to cope with the unforgiving summer heat.

“We’ve lost the beautiful Ramadan atmosphere we are accustomed to,” said Mohammed Ahmed Jassim, a 52-year-old grocer and father of three in ­Fallujah. “Before, you could tell it is Ramadan in every corner in the city,” he said. “Now everyone is staying put at home waiting for his fate.”

Many under IS rule are also enduring higher food prices, particularly for produce and bread, in part because of fighting near the Turkish border that saw farmlands burned and because of the takeover by Kurdish fighters last month of Syria’s Tal Abyad border crossing, formerly a key supply route for IS.

At the same time, the extremists have unleashed some of their most horrifying brutalities during Ramadan. In the first week of the month, the group released a video purporting to show the killing of 16 men it described as spies by drowning them in a cage lowered to the bottom of a pool, decapitating them with explosives or firing a rocket-propelled grenade at a car they were forced into.

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Last week, it posted a video that purports to show the killings of some two dozen Syrian army soldiers by young IS fighters with a bullet to the head inside the ruins of the ancient town of Palmyra.

An IS call for jihad during Ramadan appears to have triggered deadly attacks in Tunisia, Kuwait, Egypt and France over the past weeks.

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