"What do you want to be? A jihadist, or to execute a martyrdom operation?"
In the "caliphate" recently proclaimed by jihadists in Syria and Iraq, even young children are indoctrinated, and Sharia law is backed by the gun, according to a gripping documentary offering one of the first glimpses of life in Raqqa, power base of the so-called Islamic State (IS).
Part 1 of a five-episode series, The Islamic State, filmed by Anglo-Palestinian journalist Medyan Dairieh was released Thursday by New York-based Vice News.
The tone is set early: "Sharia can only be established with weapons," an IS fighter explains to Dairieh, who spent three weeks embedded with the radical Sunni group.
Dairieh, toting a video camera, gained "unprecedented access" to the organization, Vice News said.
In Raqqa, heavily-armed jihadists are seen celebrating on US armored vehicles seized during their advances in Iraq, while Sharia police patrol streets and markets with rifles over their shoulders.
Patrol chief Abu Obida orders traders to remove a poster showing "infidels," then blithely tells a man to change the fabric on his wife's veil.
"Those who don't obey will be forced," Obida explains.
In one gruesome scene, a crucified murder convict is displayed in the public square. In another, the bodies of Syrian 17th Division soldiers, killed by the jihadists during a recent offensive, are dumped on the sidewalk, their severed heads impaled on gate spikes.
"The Islamic caliphate has been established, and we will not stop," said IS press officer Abu Mosa.
A bearded man with a penchant for Ray-Ban sunglasses, Mosa accompanied Dairieh on his reporting and was shown shooting at Syrian soldiers during a skirmish.
He portrayed the group's fight as a battle against infidels like those in the West.
"Don't be cowards and attack us with drones. Instead send your soldiers, the ones we humiliated in Iraq," Mosa said of the Americans.
"We will humiliate them everywhere, God willing, and we will raise the flag of Allah in the White House."
Child training camps
Young boys look into the camera and pledge to take up the cause to "kill infidels."
A nine-year-old preparing for Kalashnikov rifle training said he was learning "to fight Russians -- umm, America."
"What do you want to be? A jihadist, or to execute a martyrdom operation?" a man identified as Abdullah the Belgian asked his six-year-old son.
"Jihadist," the boy replies, saying under prompting that infidels "kill Muslims."
Boys under 15 attend Sharia camp, while older ones learn military operations.
"We believe that this generation of children is the generation of the caliphate," said one man while children splashed in the Euphrates river.
"The right doctrine has been implanted in those children," he added. "All of them love to fight for the sake of building the Islamic State and for the sake of God."
Few women can be seen in the documentary; those who are shown wear the hijab.
Dairieh leads viewers through a courthouse where residents file complaints or wait on rulings from a Sharia judge on matters related to finance, alcohol use, adultery and other personal matters.
Asked if the process meets international standards, a clerk declares: "We aim to satisfy God, that's why we don't care about international standards."
Following a lightning offensive across Iraq in which IS was accused of numerous atrocities, the group on June 1 declared its caliphate from northern Syria to parts of eastern Iraq. Hundreds of thousands of people have fled.
Within days, jihadists advanced on autonomous Kurdistan, driving tens of thousands of minority Christians and non-Muslim Yazidis from their villages.
IS media coverage has been exceptionally rare due to security reasons. A New York Times report on the group last month did not identify its author or persons interviewed.
The brutal violence -- which has reportedly claimed the life of Mosa and another IS official since they were featured in the documentary -- makes Dairieh's time behind the IS veil extraordinary.
Kevin Sutcliffe, Vice News head of news programming for Europe, said Dairieh is likely "the only person they've let in for this amount of time."
The news outlet, part of Vice multimedia group, launched last December. Vice notably claimed a role in the 2013 "basketball diplomacy" which saw ex-NBA star Dennis Rodman travel to North Korea to meet leader Kim Jong-Un.
AFP
Sat Aug 23 2014
Shiite Muslim fighters from the Saraya al-Salam (Peace Brigades), a group formed by Iraqi Shiite Muslim cleric Moqtada al-Sadr and tasked with defending the holy sites of Shiite Islam. - AFP PHOTO / ALI AL-SAADI
Ada wajah kita tak mahu berpisah, tapi terpaksa melepaskannya - Datuk Red
Menerusi perkongsian itu, Adnan mengatakan ada perkara yang dia terpaksa reda dan menerima takdir yang sudah tertulis untuknya.
Komen jelik nahas helikopter Lumut, peniaga didenda RM23,000
Seorang peniaga dalam talian didenda RM23,000 di Mahkamah Sesyen di sini, selepas mengaku bersalah atas tuduhan memuat naik komen jelik berhubung nahas helikopter TLDM.
Bursa Malaysia dibuka rendah, jejaki prestasi Wall Street
Pada 9.10 pagi, FTSE Bursa Malaysia KLCI (FBM KLCI) susut 2.29 mata kepada 1,566.96 daripada 1,569.25 ketika ditutup pada Khamis.
AWANI Ringkas: Pesawat ringan mendarat cemas di Subang
Ikuti rangkuman berita utama yang menjadi tumpuan sepanjang hari di Astro AWANI menerusi AWANI Ringkas.
Cambodia Airways mulakan penerbangan terus Phnom Penh-Kuala Lumpur
Syarikat penerbangan Kemboja, Cambodia Airways, secara rasmi memulakan penerbangan terus dari ibu negaranya, Phnom Penh ke KLIA pada Khamis.
Semangat baharu bina ekosistem inovasi lebih dinamik
Perbadanan Pembangunan Teknologi Malaysia, MTDC meneruskan kesinambungan dalam memacu pembangunan teknologi negara, dengan melancarkan Citra MTDC, untuk mewujudkan ekosistem inovasi yang lebih dinamik.
Polis tahan guru disyaki liwat tiga pelajar
Tiga pelajar tahfiz dipercayai menjadi mangsa seks luar tabii apabila didakwa diliwat seorang guru agama dari pusat tahfiz berkenaan sejak dua tahun lalu.
Rumah Terbuka Aidilfitri Selangor di KKB langgar Akta - Bersih
Penganjuran Rumah Terbuka Aidilfitri Peringkat Negeri Selangor yang akan dianjurkan di Pekan Kuala Kubu Bharu Sabtu ini, boleh bercanggah dengan banyak peruntukan dalam Akta Kesalahan Pilihan Raya 1954 (AKPR).
Elak bergantung pada sumber lain, kukuhkan literasi kewangan
Menurut Pengarah Pusat Penyelidikan Keselamatan Sosial, Universiti Malaya, Prof. Datuk Dr Norma Mansor, pendidikan literasi kewangan dalam kalangan masyarakat juga perlu ditingkatkan agar rakyat Malaysia lebih peka terhadap keperluan merancang kewangan mereka.
Teroka pasaran baharu, tingkat perdagangan serantau
Selain lebih banyak perjanjian perdagangan bebas (FTA), beliau turut melihat perdagangan dalam kalangan ASEAN juga wajar diberi penekanan yang lebih lagi.
Berita antarabangsa pilihan sepanjang hari ini
Antara pelbagai berita luar negara yang disiarkan di Astro AWANI, berikut adalah antara yang paling menjadi tumpuan sepanjang hari ini.
Pasangan pengantin Iraq masih trauma, akui jiwa mati selepas insiden kebakaran maut
Majlis perkahwinan pada malam Selasa lalu itu dihadiri 900 tetamu, dengan kebakaran bermula kira-kira jam 10.45 malam.
Proton X90 tembusi pasaran Mauritius, Afrika Selatan dan Brunei
Kenderaan tenaga baharu pertama Proton Holdings Bhd, X90 mencatat kemunculan pertama di Mauritius, Afrika Selatan dan Brunei.
Iraq isytihar perintah berkurung di Kirkuk selepas pertempuran
Perdana Menteri Iraq Mohammed Shia' al-Sudani mengarahkan perintah berkurung dan memulakan operasi mencari di kawasan rusuhan.
3 jalani hukuman gantung di Iraq terlibat pengeboman Daesh ragut 300 nyawa
Perdana Menteri Iraq Mohammed al-Soudani menyifatkan hukuman itu "adil" semasa pertemuan dengan keluarga mangsa.
Zambry mulakan lawatan rasmi pertama ke Iraq mulai Rabu
Zambry dijangka mengadakan kunjungan hormat ke atas pemimpin Iraq dan pertemuan dua hala dengan Fuad.
NATO peluas peranannya sebagai penasihat di Iraq
NATO sedang meluaskan misinya untuk menyokong pasukan keselamatan di Iraq, menurut pakatan pertahanan Barat yang dianggotai 31 negara itu pada Khamis.
Harta bekas Menteri Minyak Iraq dirampas kerana dakwaan rasuah
Beliau didapati menyalah guna kedudukan dan menerima rasuah daripada beberapa pelabur yang mempunyai kontrak dengan Kementerian Minyak.
Iraq tarik balik larangan akses kepada Telegram
Larangan itu ditarik balik atas arahan Perdana Menteri Mohammad Shiya al-Sudani.
Iraq sekat aplikasi telegram susulan kebimbangan keselamatan
Iraq pada Ahad menyekat aplikasi pesanan segera Telegram susulan kebimbangan terhadap keselamatan negara.