ble holdt som sex-slave – fikk barn med IS-kriger:

«Hjertet brenner i brystet hver gang jeg tenker på henne»

Hundrevis av barn født av kvinner, som har blitt holdt som sexslaver av IS-krigere, blir forlatt på barnehjem.

FILE - In this Aug. 15, 2018 file, photo, baby girls stand up in their cribs at Salhiya Orphanage, which now hosts foreign and Iraqi children of Islamic State militants, in Baghdad, Iraq. The enslavement of Iraqi Yazidi women by the Islamic State group has left a heartbreaking legacy -- hundreds of children fathered by militants. While some of the women want nothing to do with babies born of rape and slavery, some want to keep them, but they face rejection by families traumatized by the militants who killed hundreds of Yazidis and tried to wipe out the community. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
In this Aug. 19, 2018 file photo, a newborn lies in her crib at the state-run al-Zuhour orphanage, in Mosul, Iraq. At al-Zuhour it's a mix of infants born to Iraqi women who were enslaved by militants and older children whose parents are jailed; some were simply abandoned in the chaos that follows a war. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
FILE - In this Aug. 16, 2018 file photo, a child peeks out from her crib at Salhiya Orphanage, which now hosts foreign and Iraqi children of Islamic State militants, in Baghdad, Iraq. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
In this Aug. 19, 2018 photo, a girl wanders through a hallway at the state-run al-Zuhour orphanage, in Mosul, Iraq. Nearly 60 Iraqi children are kept in two orphanages in Iraq's second largest city that was captured by Islamic State group militants in 2014 and liberated by U.S.-backed security forces last year after a nearly year-long battle. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
In this Aug. 19, 2018, photo, two girls act out an episode from a Tom & Jerry cartoon at the state-run al-Zuhour Orphanage in Mosul, Iraq. Nearly 60 Iraqi children are kept in two orphanages in Iraq's second largest city that was captured by the Islamic State group in 2014 and liberated by U.S.-backed security forces last year after a nearly year-long battle. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
In this Aug. 15, 2018 photo, a boy plays in the hallway at the state-run Salhiya Orphanage, which now hosts foreign and Iraqi children of Islamic State militants, in Baghdad, Iraq. 'We have slowly changed their ideas and the way they think,' said Abeer al-Chalabi, a senior government official in charge of social affairs in Baghdad. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
In this Aug. 15, 2018 photo, a worker comforts a toddler at the state-run Salhiya Orphanage, which now hosts foreign and Iraqi children orphaned by Islamic State militants and the battle to oust them, in Baghdad, Iraq. Orphanages are where wars play out: children abandoned in the chaos of battle, children born of rape and sexual slavery, babies left behind in the hospital in the hopes of a fresh start, and those left in state care after their parents are sentenced to death. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo) Foto: Maya Alleruzzo
Salhiya barnehjem i Bagdad tar imot utenlandske og irakiske barn med fedre som er IS-krigere plassert. Mange av barna er født av Yezidi-vinner som ble holdt som sexslaver. Kvinnene forteller hjerteskjærende historier om hvordan de har blitt tvunget til å forlate barna sine. NB: Barnet på bildet er ikke Maria som omtales i saken. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo, File)

En 26 år gammel Yezidi-kvinne står foran et hjerteskjærende valg: Hun kan reise fra Irak til Australia som kvoteflyktning sammen med familien sin, men hun har tankene hos sin største hemmelighet: Jenta hun fødte mens hun ble holdt som sex-slave hos en IS-kriger.- Hjertet mitt brenner i brystet hver gang jeg tenker på å dra fra henne. Hun er en del av meg, men jeg vet ikke hva jeg skal gjøre, sier kvinnen som omtales som «Mamman til Maria» til