A 17-year old girl who was tricked into joining ISIS has been beaten to death for trying to escape from the terrorists den in Syria.
17-year old Samra Kesinovic, who left home in April 2014 was killed after she was caught trying to escape Syria, Austrian media have claimed.
Her friend Sabina Selimovic, who was 15 when she left her Austrian home, is also believed to have died in the war torn Middle Eastern country.
Tabloid Österreich quotes an insider who said the girls were living with women in a house in the ISIS stronghold when Samra was caught as she tried to escape.
The pair, whose parents are Bosnian refugees, had disappeared in April last year after saying that they wanted to fight in Syria.
New photos on their Facebook pages show them brandishing Kalashnikov rifles and in some cases surrounded by armed men as Jihadi brides: Samra Kesinovic, 17, and her friend Sabina Selimovic, 15, in a picture posted online
They left behind a note telling their parents: “Don’t look for us. We will serve Allah – and we will die for him”.
Once they arrived, it is believed they were married off to local fighters and both the girls were thought to have been pregnant at one stage.
Security officials believe they first went to the Turkish capital Ankara by plane, and then on into the southern Turkish region of Adana. After that, their tracks were lost.
David Scharia, a senior Israeli expert of the United Nations Security Council's Counter-Terrorism Committee , revealed the UN had received information that one of the girls had been killed - but was unable to say which one.
He said: "We received information just recently about two 15-year-old girls, of Bosnian origin, who left Austria, where they had been living in recent years; and everyone, the families and the intelligence services of the two countries, is looking for them.
"Both were recruited by Islamic State. One was killed in the fighting in Syria, the other has disappeared."
Confirmation of one of the girls’ death came just three months after the Austrian government said it had informed both sets of parents of the girls that one of them might have been killed.