Kayla Mueller's death
was announced in February this year
|
An American aid worker who was killed in February while held
hostage by Islamic State (IS) militants in Syria, was sexually abused by the
group's top leader, US officials tell ABC news. Kayla Mueller, 26, was
repeatedly raped by Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, they said. Counterterrorism officials made her family aware of the abuse in
June. Mueller was abducted while working in Aleppo, Syria, in 2013. IS said she
was killed in a Jordanian air strike, but the US blames IS for her death.
BBC report continues:
"We were told Kayla
was tortured, that she was the property of Baghdadi. We were told that in June
by the government," her parents, Carl and Marsha, told ABC News.
Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi
reportedly took Mueller as a "wife"
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Baghdadi personally took
the humanitarian aid worker to the home of another senior IS member - Abu
Sayyaf - who was in charge of IS oil and gas until his death in
a US special forces operation in May, ABC news, citing US officials,
reports.
US special forces raid
The channel said he
regularly visited the compound where she was being held and repeatedly
assaulted her.
Officials said they had
obtained information about the abuse from at least two teenage Yazidi girls who
were held hostage as sex slaves and found inside the Sayyaf compound at the
time of the US attack.
Mueller was reportedly
held for some time by Sayyaf and his wife, Umm Sayyaf, who was also captured by
US Special Forces in May.
At the time, the Pentagon
said Umm Sayyaf was suspected of being an IS member and of being complicit in
the enslavement of a young Yazidi woman who was rescued in the raid.
Hundreds of young women
and girls - many of them Yazidis captured in northern Iraq - are believed to be
held as sex slaves by IS militants in areas under their control.
The Yazidi girls provided
intelligence used by the US to interrogate Sayyaf's wife, who "spilled
everything" about several IS leaders and their whereabouts, a
counterterrorism official told ABC.
Umm Sayyaf was handed
over to the Kurdish authorities in northern Iraq last week to face trial.
The information that has
come to light appears to contradict speculation that Mueller was treated well
in captivity, as a letter written in 2014 and smuggled out to her family
implied.
In it, Mueller tried to
reassure her family, saying that she had been treated with "utmost respect
+ kindness".
The humanitarian aid worker
from Prescott, Arizona, travelled to the Turkey-Syria border in 2012 to work
with refugees.
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