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Why the IS has released the Christian hostages: CNN
Published in Albawaba on 02 - 03 - 2015

As the ISIS released 19 Assyrian Christians on Sunday and announced plans to release 10 more, many questions have been raised trying to solve this puzzle. So far, everyone has witnessed only barbaric acts and no chance of negotiation: Igniting a live man in a cage; severing the heads of dozens; kidnapping, raping and selling women and children. But their latest decision on the fate of 19 Christian prisoners have become the latest riddle everybody has been trying to process. In the shadow of its sadistic mercilessness, and the sudden reversal, the CNN contributed in answering the obvious question: why?.
All but one of the Christians released were part of a group of 220 Assyrians captured last week during offensives on northern Syrian villages, said the London-based Syrian Observatory for Human Rights.
Who at ISIS made the decision?
It was not a militant commander but an ISIS Sharia judge, said Osama Edward, who heads the Assyrian Human Rights Network, based in Sweden.
Some of Edward's family members are among the captured Christians. His rights group keeps contact with local people, via phone and Internet, and has a field team in Syria, he said.
The Sharia judge asked the Christians if they were part of any militia, Edward said. Then he pronounced them not guilty of violating Sharia law and ordered them released.
The Assyrian Christians were all from the village of Tal Goran. They have returned home but are keeping quiet for now.
Can Christianity survive in the Middle East?
"They were so tired," Edward said. They had a closed meeting with a bishop, and then ate and went home.
"They were treated well," contacts in Tal Goran passed on to Edward. "Nobody was tortured."
Was the decision a surprise to those very familiar with ISIS?
Not to Graeme Wood, who published a detailed analysis on ISIS' religious inner workings this week in The Atlantic.
He was pleased to hear about it, but he felt it fit into ISIS' plans.
"ISIS has claimed for a long time to follow rules, and it claims that these Sharia courts will impose limits," he told CNN. "They can attempt to get credibility by showing that they follow rules and that they have some kind of transparent process that follows their particular implementation of Sharia law."
Could it be a move to impress others?
It's possible. It did win them points with Assyrian activists. "It's a good sign to show that 'we can talk,'" Edward said.
ISIS has taken heat even from other Islamists who accuse it of rogue justice, especially against Muslim civilians they've condemned as "infidels" out of hand.
It's part of the reason al Qaeda has rejected the group, Wood wrote. That reduced some of ISIS' chances of receiving international moral and financial support, leaving the terror group to make up the gap with other funding.
And it has led to a violent split with another jihadi group in Syria, the al-Nusra Front, according to The Washington Institute for Near East Policy. Other Islamist groups in Syria have frowned on ISIS for not submitting to decisions from Sharia courts.
Why go easier on a group of Christians?
The main issue drawing anger from other Islamist groups revolves around Muslim civilians, who are ISIS' most common victims. And the released captives are Christians.
But Christian activist Edward thinks the ISIS Sharia court decision was, in part, a nod to Syrian Sunni Muslim tribal leaders who negotiated for the Christians' release.
First, the tribes care deeply about their Christian neighbors and don't want them killed, Edward said. It also makes the Sunni tribal leaders look good and gets a rapport started between them and ISIS.
Why does ISIS target other Muslims most?
ISIS has a very narrow definition of who is a real Muslim and who is an apostate. Foremost, a Muslim must practice Sunni Islam in its eyes.
The group is quick to practice "takfir," which amounts to the excommunication of a Muslim, for things as seemingly petty as shaving off one's beard or voting in an election. ISIS is quick to kill anyone it condemns, because it wants to create a fanatically pure caliphate with only the strictest devotees, Wood wrote.
ISIS has executed 125 of its own members for doing things that broke with its strict take on Islam, the Syrian Observatory said.
Could the Sharia judge's decision to release the Christians be a routine one?
Yes. Even in the strictest interpretation of Islam, there is a provision for sparing Christians, Wood wrote.
Social media posts indicate that ISIS carries out mass killings regularly, but "exempted from automatic execution, it appears, are Christians who do not resist their new government." They are required to pay a special tax and acknowledge the new ruling power.
That's exactly what the judge ruled, Edward said.
The released Assyrian Christians agreed to acknowledge ISIS as their new masters and to pay the tax.
ISIS is still holding two of Tal Goran's Christian villagers, Edward said. They should be released as soon as the taxes are paid.
He is hoping for the same deal for the other Christian villagers, including for his family.


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