Inside terrifying ISIS dungeon where women prisoners were kept locked UNDER THE DESERT in horrifying conditions
Drawings made by terrified prisoners of houses in the countryside can be seen on the walls of the small, dark dungeon
This is a terrifying dungeon deep in the desert where ISIS militants kept women prisoners trapped underground.
Small panels on the surface of the northern Syrian desert are the only hint of the horror that lies underneath.
Brutal ISIS militants are thought to have kept Yazidi woman prisoners inside the tiny, cramped space.
The women would have had barely any space to move and would have spent hours in complete darkness.
Despite this, heartbreaking images show how the prisoners drew on the walls, keeping a diary of their horrifying time locked up.
These panels on the northern Syrian desert are the only sign of the horrors that lie beneath the ground
It is believed that Yazidi women were kept locked in the dungeon
One drawing appears to show a large house with a car and animals outside.
It is not known what happened to the women believed to have been kept in the brutal dungeon.
It comes after reports that ISIS have constructed a missile capable of bringing down a jet.
Activists
in Syria claim western defectors to ISIS with experience in engineering
have managed to successfully create the devastating weapon - which
could potentially down aircraft if the reports are true.
Prisoners would have been kept in a dark, tiny space
Prisoners trapped in the dungeon made drawings on the walls
Engineer Rwanda Tahir, a Dane of Iraqi
origins, and 'Omar the Chechen', a former Russian military officer, are
said to have been instrumental in the creation of the weapon.
The development has terrifying implications, after ISIS claimed that it caused the crash of a Russian passenger plane in Sinai that killed all 224 people on board on October 31.
Reuters
A fighter of the Islamic State holds a flag
Activist group Raqqa Is Being Silently Slaughtered says the
terror group wants to carry out more sophisticated terrorist attacks on
France, America and Russia.
A military truck was seen carrying a large land-to-air rocket, which was launched in Raqqa - Islamic State 's de facto capital.
ISIS has reportedly installed radar in the city to warn the terror thugs about incoming airstrikes .
RIBSS
sources added that this system was developed in an Iraqi weapons
workshop, and then transferred to the city of Raqqa to link it with the
radar system there.
Meanwhile, Egypt said today it had found no evidence so far
of terrorism or other illegal action linked to the crash of a Russian
Metrojet flight.
Russia and Western governments have said the Airbus A321 was likely brought down by a bomb, and the Islamic State militant group said it had smuggled an explosive on board.
But
Egypt's civil aviation ministry said it had completed a preliminary
report on the crash and said it had so far found no evidence of a
criminal act.
"The technical investigative committee has so far
not found anything indicating any illegal intervention or terrorist
action," the ministry said in a statement.
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