One of the men explained they were prisoners of Islamic State, to
which the commando replied: "Don't be afraid, we have come to liberate
you with the Americans".
The last thing that came to Saad Khalaf Ali's mind as his Islamic State interrogators smothered him with a plastic bag was his two wives and children. Then everything went dark.
He
was jolted back to his senses by an electric current coursing through
his body, and came round soaked in water and gasping for breath on the
floor of a prison in northern Iraq.
The
former policeman is one of many Iraqis to have suffered at the hands of
Islamic State, which tortures, executes or beheads anyone deemed
immoral or an opponent of its ideology and its goal of creating a
caliphate across the Muslim world.
Saad withstood
the punishment but succumbed to psychological pressure when the
militants threatened to slaughter his entire family.
He
confessed to informing Kurdish and Iraqi forces about Islamic State
positions, an action frequently punishable by beheading or shooting at
point blank range.
"I confessed to everything," said the 32-year old former policeman from the Hawija area.
A small man with large ears, Saad was brought blindfolded before a judge who sentenced him to death.
It would have been carried out on the morning of Oct. 22 if not for a daring rescue mission that same night by Kurdish and U.S. Special Forces. Saad and 68 other hostages were freed.
Reuters
interviewed three of them at a security facility in the Kurdish
regional capital Erbil. The men recounted their experiences of life
under Islamic State rule, and the physical and psychological torment
that often comes with it.
Many of the prisoners
were former members of the Iraqi security forces who fought some of the
same insurgents before the militants overran a third of Iraq.
Reuters could not independently verify the accounts.
One
U.S. commando was killed - the first American to die in ground combat
in Iraq since the United States withdrew its troops in 2011 - and four
Kurds were wounded in the rescue.
TWO WITNESSES
The windowless room in which 31-year old Ahmed Mahmoud Mustafa was held could only just fit him and 38 others when they stretched out to sleep.
The
prisoners were expected to remain silent, pray five times a day and
read Islamic lessons provided by their captors. Meals consisted of
potatoes, lentils and tomato.
Occasionally, one of the men would say a verse of poetry as a lament and the others wept quietly.
Surveillance
cameras in the corners of the room monitored their movements, and they
were sometimes forced to watch clips of beheadings played on a large
screen.
One man averted his gaze from a particularly grisly scene and was beaten on the head, according to Ahmed and Mohammed Abd Ahmed, who was also held there.
It
was neither man's first brush with Islamic State's wrath. Several
months earlier, Mohammed had been whipped fifty times for criticising
the militants, and was warned they would slice off his tongue next time.
Ahmed
had also been detained on four previous occasions because a person he
had a personal dispute with had connections with the militants.
This
time, both men faced the more serious charge of spying. Their
interrogators - fellow Iraqis - had a file for each prisoner detailing
crimes corroborated by two witnesses.
One of the
two men who had testified against Ahmed was killed in an airstrike,
winning him a brief reprieve. But the militants soon found another man
prepared to testify against him: his own cousin.
Once
the interrogators finished their work, they gave the prisoner's file to
a judge, who ordered either execution or more interrogation.
In
the end, Mohammed succumbed to the torture and put his fingerprint on a
list of charges as an admission of guilt, reasoning that denial would
only prolong his suffering and death was inevitable anyway.
The interrogators asked whether he would prefer to be decapitated from in front or behind. "It's up to you," he replied.
LAST WISHES
In
a separate room, Saad could hear the sound of heavy machinery outside
and clambered onto the back of another prisoner to peer through an
opening in the wall. He saw a bulldozer digging a trench.
The
following day, October 21, four of the prisoners were taken from the
room and a short while later, the remaining 26 heard four gunshots.
Saad was informed it would be his turn the following morning.
There was no paper or pencil, so he used a nail to etch his last wishes onto a Muslim prayer timetable as the hours ran out.
The
message addressed to his nephew was short: It asked that he look after
his family and identified the two men who had informed on him, so his
death could be avenged.
Then Saad prayed for
himself, weeping uncontrollably until he was interrupted at around 2
a.m. by the sound of helicopter rotors that heralded the end of his
ordeal.
Following an intense firefight, the door of the room was smashed down by a Kurdish commando with an M16 rifle.
"Are any of you Kurds?" the man shouted, as Saad recalls. "We said no, we are Arabs".
One of the men explained they were prisoners of Islamic State, to which the commando replied: "Don't be afraid, we have come to liberate you with the Americans".
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Tortured by Islamic State, rescued before