A
German teenager who ran away from home and joined
ISIS has been jailed for six years in
Iraq.
Linda Wenzel has been caged in the Iraqi capital Baghdad for her role as an Islamic Sharia law-enforcer with the terror group, which she joined at 15.
Wenzel, who last year sobbed on TV 'I have ruined my life,' could have faced the death penalty.
She received five years for joining ISIS and one year for entering Iraq illegally.
Wenzel was found in the rubble of ISIS stronghold Mosul back in the summer of 2017.
Charges were laid against her and three other German women captured with her.
The schoolgirl fled to Turkey, then into Syria last year from her hometown of Pulsnitz in Eastern Germany after being groomed online by a Chechen ISIS fighter.
Wenzel married the Chechen man, who was later killed during the battle for Mosul.
Wenzel worked for the all-female Al-Khansaa brigade, a 'morality police force' made up of mainly foreign women Jihadists who patrolled the streets of captured ISIS territories such as Raqqa in Syria, and Mosul in Iraq.
They would enforce strict Sharia, and hand out beatings to women who violated the religious laws, such as not obeying dress codes or venturing outside on their own without a male family member.
Wenzel burst into tears after her capture last year, and said she just wanted to come home.
She was later filmed with her mother Katharine, 48, in Baghdad.
She said she never fought for the terror group, lived in a variety of houses in Mosul and, after the death of her husband, 'barely left the house.'
It is understood Germany wants her to be allowed to serve her sentence in her homeland although no exchange-treaty with Iraq exists