Author's journey inside ISIS: They're 'more dangerous than people realize'
December 22, 2014 -- Updated 1257 GMT (2057 HKT)
Watch Amanpour on CNNI TV at 1900 GMT/2000 CET for a half-hour special on Juergen Todenhoefer's journey inside ISIS.
(CNN) -- Juergen Todenhoefer's journey was a tough
one: dangerous, but also eye-opening. The author traveled deep into ISIS
territory -- the area they now call their "caliphate" -- visiting Raqqa
and Deir Ezzor in Syria, as well as Mosul in Iraq.
Mosul, Iraq's second largest city, was taken by ISIS in a Blitzkrieg-like sweep in June.
Todenhoefer managed to visit the mosque there where the leader of ISIS, Abu Bakr al-Bagdadi, gave his only public address.
And he saw the realities of daily life under ISIS, with all shops having to close for prayers in the middle of the day.
"There is an awful sense of normalcy in Mosul," Todenhoefer said in an exclusive interview with CNN.
"130,000 Christians have
been evicted from the city, the Shia have fled, many people have been
murdered and yet the city is functioning and people actually like the
stability that the Islamic State has brought them."
Nonetheless, he says,
there is an air of fear among residents: "Of course many of the them are
quite scared, because the punishment for breaking the Islamic State's
strict rules is very severe."
For more : ISIS 'more dangerous than people realize'
For more : ISIS 'more dangerous than people realize'
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