What has life been like for the Islamic State 'poster girls'?
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Two teenage girls who fled their Austrian homes to join the Islamic State, described as 鈥榩oster girls鈥 for the caliphate, are now desperate to return after apparently becoming disillusioned with their jihadi lifestyle.
The girls, 15-year-old Sabina Selimovic and 17-year-old Samra Kesinovic , according to the International Business Times. The pair, who are among hundreds of young women who have been reportedly wooed by IS fighters to become 鈥渏ihadi brides,鈥 were persuaded to travel to Syria in April.
Before leaving, the girls, who are the children of Bosnian migrants, about their Muslim beliefs and left a note for their parents: 鈥淒on鈥檛 look for us. We will serve Allah 鈥 and we will die for him,鈥 the Mirror reported.
It is believed they are living in Raqqa, Syria, the de facto capital of the Islamic State, a city governed by strict sharia law.
Austrian police say that the girls鈥 social media accounts were to broadcast fake messages to encourage other young girls to head to Syria, according to the Vienna Times. Photos show the girls, smiling and wearing traditional clothing, flanked by armed Muslim fighters.
But security service insiders have told Austrian media that the girls have somehow managed to contact their families 鈥渢o say they have had enough, and want to come home,鈥 the Vienna Times reported. But those same officials warn 鈥渢here is almost now no chance that they will be able to leave their new lives after they became internationally famous and the images were shared all round the world.鈥
If they were to return, they for supporting a terrorist organization, according to the Daily Express.
News of the girls鈥 attempts to return home comes amid reports of Western women flocking to similar jihadi lifestyles. Dozens of teenagers 鈥 including a young Jewish girl 鈥 have fighting in Syria and Iraq, French intelligence has revealed, according to the Daily Mail.
The departures are less the whims of adolescents and more the conclusions of months of work by organised radical recruitment networks that specifically target young people in search of an identity.
These mostly online networks recruit girls to serve as wives, babysitters and housekeepers for jihadists, with the aim of planting multi-generational roots for a long-lasting Islamic caliphate.
IS recruiters plan the entire journey for the girls, and ensure their families are completely unaware.
The Daily Mail noted Selimovic and Kesinovic had contact with Chechen youths, visited a mosque in Vienna, and police worried the two were inspiring others after two more teenage girls attempted to follow their lead.
In September, a Syrian woman walked the streets of Raqqa with a camera hidden in her niqab. The video offers a rare glimpse of what life is like in the IS stronghold, where the group has imposed a radical interpretation of Islamic law.