According to citizens living in areas under ISIS control, an epidemic of contagious diseases surged in areas seized by Islamist fighters of the so-called Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS).
The lack of medical equipment, the paucity of medications and unprotected sexual intercourse with local sex slaves ( sexual jihad) are deemed to be the main reasons for the widespread occurrence of the infectious diseases in Iraqi northern and western provinces.
In order to curb the spread of infectious diseases which inflicted the extremist organization heavy losses in the recent days, the ISIS high command ordered the incremation of dead Mujahidin whom brought these viral diseases from Caucasian or African countries.
Due to the absence of international bodies in vast areas dominated by ISIS fighters, it may not be possible to identify the exact epicenters of the infectious diseases such as Measles, rubella, typhoid, respiratory diseases, though some news reports suggest that the plague is spreading city after city and is triggering a serious and frightening epidemic in Mousl, Iraq’s second largest city conquered by zealot Saudi-backed militants.
In areas controlled by ISIS, You cannot get employed in these four jobs
According to new Islamic mandatory decree, issued by ISIS’s central Sharia council, no Muslim citizen has this right to hold the following occupations: Painting, acting in Cinema and theater, singing and being a musician. As a consequence, all activities which are germane to the mentioned careers are prohibited and regarded as un-Islamic and who do not abide by these regulations will be punished severely.
ISIS bans 50 ‘blasphemous’ baby names — like Nadia, Sarah and Lara
In another poignant though hilarious report from territories under ISIS control, ISIS authorities have banned 50 names for babies born in the cities occupied by the notorious organization, calling them blasphemous, inappropriate and a contradiction to the Islamic culture.
ISIS central sharia council “justified the ban by saying that the names either contradicted the culture Islamic religion, or were foreign, or inappropriate,” RT reported. “The names fit into at least three categories — those that offend perceived religious sensibilities, those that are affiliated to royalty and those that are of non-Arabic or non-Islamic origin.”
Some, like Benjamin, Diana and Lina didn’t meet any of those standards.
“A number of other names appear that do not necessarily fit into any category, and it is therefore unclear as to why they would have been banned,” the Gulf News report said.
Persian Gulf Arab states want to establish formal ties with ISIS
Meanwhile according to a well-informed Turkish source, on 6th of September, Ghanem Al –Qubaisi, Emirati intelligence chief met with Ahmed al-Alwani, ISIS military commander in an underground meeting, conveyed PGCC’s (Persian Gulf cooperation council) letter to ISIS high command, stating that if ISIS do not trespass the red lines and the previous commitments, all Arab kingdoms except Qatar will recognize ISIS as the legitimate authority in Iraq and Syria.