Blood-stained pamphlets, kiosks: In Raqqa ruins, clues to bygone IS media empire

Scattered across Raqa are bluish-grey cement kiosks labelled “media points,” where IS members would distribute printed publications on everything from their military conquests in Syria and Iraq, to guidelines for fasting and rules on women’s wear.

world Updated: Oct 22, 2017 11:45 IST
(FILES) This file photo taken on October 20, 2017 shows fighters of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) walking down a street in Raqa past destroyed vehicles and heavily damaged buildings after a Kurdish-led force expelled Islamic State (IS) group fighters from the northern Syrian city, formerly their
(FILES) This file photo taken on October 20, 2017 shows fighters of the Syrian Democratic Forces (SDF) walking down a street in Raqa past destroyed vehicles and heavily damaged buildings after a Kurdish-led force expelled Islamic State (IS) group fighters from the northern Syrian city, formerly their "capital". (AFP)

“Special operations by the Caliphate’s soldiers!” boasts a torn, blood-stained pamphlet at a bombed-out media kiosk in Syria’s Raqqa, a symbol of the Islamic State group’s once fearsome propaganda machine.

As well as serving as the Syrian capital of IS’s “caliphate,” Raqqa was the beating heart of much of its media output and was painstakingly portrayed as a jihadist paradise where Islamic law had finally been applied.

But since a US-backed offensive brought IS’s three-year reign over the city to an end, the backbone of the jihadists’ macabre marketing now lies in ruins.

Scattered across Raqqa are bluish-grey cement kiosks labelled “media points,” where IS members would distribute printed publications on everything from their military conquests in Syria and Iraq, to guidelines for fasting and rules on women’s wear.

One such kiosk stands in Raqqa’s central Clock Tower Square, just next to what appears to be an outdoor viewing lounge under a slanted roof missing half of its bricks.

Six dusty rows of alternating green and red cushioned seats face a metal stand where a television should have been. A flat screen TV lay smashed on the ground nearby.

“Daesh (IS) used to broadcast their productions here for residents to watch -- footage of their battles, punishments, and anasheeds (Islamic hymns),” said Shoresh al-Raqqawi, a 25-year-old Raqqa native and Syrian Democratic Forces fighter.

The SDF ousted the last remaining IS fighters from Raqqa on Tuesday and while most of the forces had withdrawn, Raqqawi stayed behind as part of a small unit helping to clear rubble from streets and remove mines.

The only sign of movement on Saturday in the heavily-damaged neighbourhoods around Raqqa’s famous clock tower was by bulldozers and a handful of white SDF pickup trucks.

Raqqawi recounted how IS members working at the kiosk would stop young men with cell phones and erase the songs on their devices, replacing them with Islamic anasheeds.

“Daesh also used to bring young children here, give them sweets, potato chips, and biscuits, and make them watch the videos and listen to their songs,” he added.

- Behemoth administration -

For years, IS has operated a sophisticated and multilingual media machine, complete with online magazines, radio broadcasts, and social media campaigns highlighting its military prowess and gruesome tactics.

It often used minors in its propaganda output to ratchet up the shock factor, boasting of child soldiers that it called “Cubs of the Caliphate.”

While IS media continue to operate from elsewhere following Raqqa’s fall, there has been a shift in tone, with the narrative nostalgically recalling the caliphate.

On Saturday the names and logos of IS’s many outlets could be seen emblazoned on a tattered, greyish banner near the media kiosk in Clock Tower Square: Al-Bayan Radio, Al-Hayat, Al-Furqan, and Al-Naba pamphlet.

The group used the channels to publish grisly footage online of the punishment and even execution of alleged opponents, including Western hostages or those accused of being spies.

But while most of the world could look away, Raqqawi and fellow SDF fighter Khalid Abu Walid were often forced to watch these practices live.

“They would whip and hit people so hard,” said Abu Walid, 21, telling AFP how shops and streets in the roundabout would shutter and residents would gather around to watch whatever punishment was being doled out.

“All roundabouts in Raqa had media points like this,” Abu Walid said.

Torn IS papers can be found on almost every damaged Raqa street, providing clues to the behemoth administration that the jihadist organisation once ran there.

One dusty card features a table recording the number of times its owner received zakat, or charitable offers, from others.

Another document details the handover of the hisba -- or police office -- from one manager to another.

On Saturday, a unit of foreign intelligence officers dressed in military gear and thick neon orange gloves could be seen inspecting a home near Raqa’s infamous Al-Naim roundabout.

“They are searching suspected IS headquarters, which they heard about from residents who escaped the city,” an SDF fighter accompanying them said on condition of anonymity because he was not authorised to speak to the press.

“They are looking for bodies, identification cards, and other intelligence.”