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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing masked militants on a tank in Syria (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing masked militants in Syria (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10008269_001
NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing ISIS militants with weapons (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10024962_005
NEWS - US-Aussenminister Kerry zu Friedensgesprächen in Wien
(160516) -- VIENNA, May 16, 2016 (Xinhua) -- European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini (2nd L) attends a conference on the issue of the Islamic State (IS) in Libya, in Vienna, capital of Austria, on May 16, 2016. Leading foreign ministers from Europe and the Middle East met in the Austrian capital on Monday under the joint chairmanship of the United States and Italy to discuss how to bolster support for Libya's unity government in the face of deepening splits in the country over political legitimacy and growing threats by the Islamic State (IS). (Xinhua/Qian Yi)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01643039
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - US-Aussenminister Kerry zu Friedensgesprächen in Wien
(160516) -- VIENNA, May 16, 2016 (Xinhua) -- German Foreign Minister Frank-Walter Steinmeier (4th R, Front) attends a conference on the issue of the Islamic State (IS) in Libya, in Vienna, capital of Austria, on May 16, 2016. Leading foreign ministers from Europe and the Middle East met in the Austrian capital on Monday under the joint chairmanship of the United States and Italy to discuss how to bolster support for Libya's unity government in the face of deepening splits in the country over political legitimacy and growing threats by the Islamic State (IS). (Xinhua/Qian Yi)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
E: info@eyevine.com
http://www.eyevine.com
(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01643038
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing masked militants firing weapons (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_002
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Andrea Hoffman and Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598200
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Andrea Hoffman and Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598198
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598206
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598194
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598193
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598196
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598195
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598202
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598192
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598191
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598190
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598189
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598186
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598183
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_021
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598184
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_003
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598182
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_022
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Andrea Hoffman and Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598181
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_010
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Andrea Hoffman and Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598180
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_017
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Andrea Hoffman and Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598177
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_018
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598178
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598173
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598171
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598168
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598167
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598160
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_006
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598165
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598161
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598162
(c) Dukas -
DUK10037681_025
NEWS - Farida Khalaf, das Mädchen das die ISIS besiegte
September 10, 2016 - Amsterdam, Holland: Farida Khalaf, a Yazidi refugee from the small village of Kocho, Iraq. In the summer of 2014 when Farida at 18 years old was preparing for her last year in school, radical Islamists of the ISIS terror group descended upon her village, and she was sold into slavery. ISIS jihadists murdered the men and boys, including her father and brother, before taking Farida and the other women prisoner. After her capture she endured beatings, rapes, markets where ISIS sold women like cattle. Farida realized that the more resistant she became, the harder it was for her captors to continue their atrocities against her. So she struggled, she bit, she kicked, she accused her captors of going against their religion, until, one day, the door to her room was left unlocked. She took her chance and, with five younger girls in her charge, fled into the Syrian desert. She showed incredible courage in the face of the unthinkable, and now with The Girl Who Beat ISIS she bravely relives her story to bear witness. This is the first memoir by a young woman that shows first-hand what life is like for innocents caught up in the maelstrom of day-to-day life with ISIS. (Bas Bogaerts / Polaris) (FOTO:DUKAS/POLARIS) *** Local Caption *** 05598201
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - US-Aussenminister Kerry zu Friedensgesprächen in Wien
(160516) -- VIENNA, May 16, 2016 (Xinhua) -- European Union foreign policy chief Federica Mogherini (2nd L) attends a conference on the issue of the Islamic State (IS) in Libya, in Vienna, capital of Austria, on May 16, 2016. Leading foreign ministers from Europe and the Middle East met in the Austrian capital on Monday under the joint chairmanship of the United States and Italy to discuss how to bolster support for Libya's unity government in the face of deepening splits in the country over political legitimacy and growing threats by the Islamic State (IS). (Xinhua/Qian Yi)
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01643039
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - US-Aussenminister Kerry zu Friedensgesprächen in Wien
(160516) -- VIENNA, May 16, 2016 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (C) attends a conference on the issue of the Islamic State (IS) in Libya, in Vienna, capital of Austria, on May 16, 2016. Leading foreign ministers from Europe and the Middle East met in the Austrian capital on Monday under the joint chairmanship of the United States and Italy to discuss how to bolster support for Libya's unity government in the face of deepening splits in the country over political legitimacy and growing threats by the Islamic State (IS). (Xinhua/Qian Yi)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01643036
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - US-Aussenminister Kerry zu Friedensgesprächen in Wien
(160516) -- VIENNA, May 16, 2016 (Xinhua) -- U.S. Secretary of State John Kerry (C) attends a conference on the issue of the Islamic State (IS) in Libya, in Vienna, capital of Austria, on May 16, 2016. Leading foreign ministers from Europe and the Middle East met in the Austrian capital on Monday under the joint chairmanship of the United States and Italy to discuss how to bolster support for Libya's unity government in the face of deepening splits in the country over political legitimacy and growing threats by the Islamic State (IS). (Xinhua/Qian Yi)
Xinhua News Agency / eyevine
Contact eyevine for more information about using this image:
T: +44 (0) 20 8709 8709
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(FOTO: DUKAS/EYEVINE) *** Local Caption *** 01643037
(c) Dukas -
DUK10011381_012
NEWS - Das deutsche Luftwaffengeschwader ist bereit für Syrien
Am Tag der Abstimmung im Bundestag: Medientag beim Taktischen Luftwaffengeschwader 51 Immelmann auf dem Fliegerhorst Schleswig in Jagel / 041215 *** Media day at the Tactical Air Force Wing 51 Immelmann in Jagel near Schleswig, Germany; December 4th, 2015 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 20911893
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Das deutsche Luftwaffengeschwader ist bereit für Syrien
Am Tag der Abstimmung im Bundestag: Medientag beim Taktischen Luftwaffengeschwader 51 Immelmann auf dem Fliegerhorst Schleswig in Jagel / 041215 *** Media day at the Tactical Air Force Wing 51 Immelmann in Jagel near Schleswig, Germany; December 4th, 2015 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 20911901
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Das deutsche Luftwaffengeschwader ist bereit für Syrien
Am Tag der Abstimmung im Bundestag: Medientag beim Taktischen Luftwaffengeschwader 51 Immelmann auf dem Fliegerhorst Schleswig in Jagel / 041215 *** Media day at the Tactical Air Force Wing 51 Immelmann in Jagel near Schleswig, Germany; December 4th, 2015 *** (FOTO: DUKAS/ACTIONPRESS) *** Local Caption *** 20911899
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Washington: Barack Obama empfängt François Hollande
United States President Barack Obama hosts President François Hollande of France for a bilateral meeting in the Oval Office of the White House in Washington, DC on Tuesday, November 24, 2015. The leaders are meeting to discuss coordination of their efforts in the war against ISIL in the aftermath of the attacks in Paris. (Photo by Ron Sachs/Pool) *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 16486667
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing masked militants in Syria (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing masked militants in Syria (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing the Black Muhammad Standard banner symbol of ISIS (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS - Propagaganda Bilder der IS
Nov. 19, 2015 - Raqqa, Syria - Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant propaganda photo showing an ISIS militant in Syria (FOTO: DUKAS/ZUMA)
(c) Dukas -
DUK10003921_021
NEWS: Flüchtlingsstrom an der Ungarisch-Österreichichen Grenze
Migrants on their way to the border crossing between Hungary and Austria at Hegyeshalom-Nickelsdorf , as over 1,500 new migrants arrived at the Hegyeshalom train station in the afternoon. Hegyeshalom, Hungary. 28 September 2015. *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 16061382
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS: Flüchtlingsstrom an der Ungarisch-Österreichichen Grenze
Over 1,500 new migrants arrived at the Hegyeshalom train station near the Hungarian-Austrian border. Hegyeshalom, Hungary. 28 September 2015. *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 16061365
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS: Flüchtlingsstrom an der Ungarisch-Österreichichen Grenze
Over 1,500 new migrants arrived at the Hegyeshalom train station near the Hungarian-Austrian border. Hegyeshalom, Hungary. 28 September 2015. *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 16061375
(c) Dukas -
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NEWS: Flüchtlingsstrom an der Ungarisch-Österreichichen Grenze
Migrants await for the bus at the border crossing between Hungary and Austria at Nickelsdorf , as over 1,500 new migrants arrived at the Hegyeshalom train station in the afternoon. Nickelsdorf, Austria. 28 September 2015. *** Please Use Credit from Credit Field *** *** Local Caption *** 16061393
(c) Dukas
