The harrowing reports come as more than 1,000 Yazidi victims are being given therapy to come to terms with the sickening abuse
A doctor revealed how a young girl who was repeatedly raped by sick ISIS soldiers burned off her own face so she wouldn't be captured again.
As the terror group spreads its message of hate across the Middle East , thousands of Yazidi women and girls have been forced into being sex slaves.
A German doctor who set up a project to bring victims to Europe for therapy has revealed the extent of abuse they have faced at the hands of the murderous group.
This includes one young girl who was so traumatised after escaping rape and torture that she set fire to herself to make her face less attractive.
And one eight-year-old is recovering after she was raped hundreds of times.
Jan Ihan Kizilhan heads the project in Baden-Wurttemberg that brings 1,100 victims to Germany for treatment.
He told how one of the young girls he met in a refugee camp last August set herself on fire after having a nightmare she has been recaptured.
Mr Kizilhan said: "She had no nose, no ears left."
The young girl had escaped ISIS with her sisters, after they were taken to be repeatedly raped and tortured.
She woke up in a panic one night and poured gasoline over herself.
She lit a match, hoping the burns would make her so ugly that she wouldn't be raped again.
The young girl then worried she wouldn't survive and put out the flames quickly.
She is now in hospital in Germany after more than a dozen operations, but she will still need another 30 skin and bone surgeries.
Another eight-year-old girl was repeatedly raped hundreds of times by evil soldiers, after she was sold as a sex slave.
Mr Kizilhan added: "ISIS sold her eight times during the 10 months she was held hostage, and raped her hundreds of times.
"This is one of the cases I always have in my mind."
Those who manage to escape ISIS are often shunned by their communities, as the act of being raped or made pregnant by the evil group is seen as 'dishonourable'.
This causes many survivors to turn to prostitution in order to feed their families.
At the clinic in Germany, they are cared for by specialist nurses before undergoing intense therapy.
This will not start for another six months, after the women and young girls have had enough time to adjust to life free from ISIS control.
Mr Kizilhan said: "They need the feeling of security. That is not easy after what they have experienced."
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