Thief is maimed for life in Raqqa where brutal ISIS Sharia law judges chop off his hand
An accused thief has had his right hand cut off with a meat cleaver in the ISIS 'capital' of Raqqa as punishment for his crime.
The
photos, which all have identical captions in Arabic, say that it shows
the 'implementation of the punishment of a thief from Raqqa city'.
Surrounded
by up to 50 men and boys and held in place by two ISIS enforcers, the
man is forced to his knees as his right hand, wrapped in white bandages,
is placed on a wooden desk before it is cut off and put into a white
plastic bag.
It is less than a week since ISIS militants carried out a similar punishment on a man in Mosul, Iraq
Cutting off
the right hand as a punishment for theft is a strict interpretation of
Sharia law, carried out by the so-called Islamic State, Saudi Arabia and
Iran.
It
comes as US Defense Secretary Ash Carter has predicted that recent
US-led efforts to accelerate the fight against ISIS would produce
'tangible gains' in Iraq and Syria by March, even as he urged coalition
partners to expand and deepen their military contributions.
Carter
expected that defense ministers from more than two dozen countries
would endorse a new U.S. plan for taking on IS. The ministers planned a
joint statement after their meeting at NATO headquarters.
In
public remarks at the start of the session, Carter cast the talks as an
historic effort to hasten the demise of IS, which has proved resilient
in Iraq and Syria and is spreading to Afghanistan, Libya and elsewhere
in the greater Middle East.
Carter said
coalition military chiefs, including U.S. Joint Chiefs Chairman Gen.
Joseph Dunford, would meet soon to discuss and evaluate the campaign,
and that in mid-March the U.S. Central Command headquarters in Florida
would convene a military conference to assess progress.
'By
then, at the latest, we should begin to see tangible gains from those
additional capabilities, from the ones the coalition is already bringing
to bear,' Carter said.
Carter
said the U.S. is determined to accelerate the war campaign and
recapture as soon as possible the Islamic State group's main strongholds
- Raqqa in Syria and Mosul in Iraq.
Syrian
government forces are yet to make a concerted push on Raqqa, despite
making significant gains against Opposition forces in Aleppo.
President
Bashar's ground forces backed by Lebanese Hezbollah militants, Iranian
commanders and Afghan fighters surround Aleppo after heavy air
bombardment from Syrian and Russian jets causing hundreds of thousands
of Syrians to flee to the Turkish border.
Five
years of civil war have pitted President Bashar Assad's government,
backed by Russia and Iran, against an array of weakened opposition
groups, some supported by the United States.
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