Santa Fe New Mexican

Feds: Kansas woman led all-female ISIS battalion

- By Matthew Barakat

FALLS CHURCH, Va. — A woman who once lived in Kansas has been arrested after federal prosecutor­s charged her with joining the Islamic State group and leading an all-female battalion of AK-47 wielding militants.

The U.S. Attorney in Alexandria, Va., announced Saturday Allison Fluke-Ekren, 42, has been charged with providing material support to a terrorist organizati­on. The criminal complaint was filed under seal back in 2019 but made public Saturday after Fluke-Ekren was brought back to the U.S. on Friday to face charges. Her alleged participat­ion in the Islamic State had not been publicly known before Saturday’s announceme­nt.

Prosecutor­s say Fluke-Ekren wanted to recruit operatives to attack a college campus in the U.S. and discussed a terrorist attack on a shopping mall. She told one witness “she considered any attack that did not kill a large number of individual­s to be a waste of resources,” according to an FBI affidavit.

That affidavit from FBI Special Agent David Robins also alleges that Fluke-Ekren became leader of an Islamic State unit called “Khatiba Nusaybah” in the Syrian city of Raqqa in late 2016. The all-female unit was trained in the use of AK-47 rifles, grenades and suicide belts. In all, the affidavit cites observatio­ns from six different witnesses, including some who have been charged with terrorism offenses and some who were held at prison camps for former Islamic state members.

A detention memo filed Friday by First Assistant U.S. Attorney Raj Parekh states Fluke-Ekren even trained children how to use assault rifles, and that at least one witness saw one of Fluke-Ekren’s children, approximat­ely 5 or 6 years old, holding a machine gun in the family’s home in Syria.

“Fluke-Ekren has been a fervent believer in the radical terrorist ideology of ISIS for many years, having traveled to Syria to commit or support violent jihad.

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