Kayla Mueller

Worker

Birthday August 14, 1988

Birth Sign Leo

Birthplace Prescott, Arizona, U.S.

DEATH DATE 2015-2-6, Raqqa, Syria (26 years old)

Nationality United States

#12956 Most Popular

1988

Kayla Jean Mueller (August 14, 1988 – February 6, 2015) was an American human rights activist and humanitarian aid worker from Prescott, Arizona, United States.

2007

After graduating from Tri-City College Prep High School in 2007, she attended Northern Arizona University in Flagstaff to study political science.

Mueller was a practicing Christian.

As a college student, she was active in an ecumenical Christian campus ministry, United Christian Ministries.

She also practiced Bhakti yoga.

Mueller supported a variety of humanitarian aid and human rights initiatives.

Her involvement in human rights activism and humanitarian aid included working in India with Tibetan refugees.

Her work in the Middle East included volunteering for the pro-Palestinian activist group the International Solidarity Movement and helping African refugees in Israel with the African Refugees Development Center.

Other humanitarian and activist causes Mueller was involved in at home and abroad were Vrindavan Food For Life, which provides free food, education, and medical care for those in need; and during college, Food Not Bombs.

2012

Mueller started working in southern Turkey in December 2012, where she was assisting Syrian refugees.

2013

She was taken captive in August 2013 in Aleppo, Syria, after leaving a Doctors Without Borders hospital.

Media had long reported that a 26-year-old American aid worker was being held by ISIS without naming her, at her family's request.

On August 3, 2013, she traveled to the northern Syrian city of Aleppo with her boyfriend, a Syrian contractor hired to install communications equipment at the Doctors Without Borders hospital in Aleppo.

Although Mueller had been working with international aid agency Support to Life in Turkey, this was not a work-related trip.

Doctors Without Borders staff were "flabbergasted" at Mueller's arrival, fearing for her safety, as Syria was dangerous for international aid workers and amid a civil war.

The following day, Doctors Without Borders staff tried to drive Mueller to a bus station so she could travel back to Turkey.

The car was ambushed, and both Mueller and her boyfriend were abducted by ISIS.

Her boyfriend was freed 20 days later.

The US military and Mueller's family attempted to rescue Mueller several times, devoting considerable resources to the search.

2014

In July 2014, US special operations forces (from Delta Force and 75th Ranger Regiment) raided an abandoned oil refinery near Raqqa in an unsuccessful attempt to find reporter James Foley (whom ISIS later murdered) and other hostages.

The commandos found evidence that the hostages had recently been held there, finding writing on the cell walls and hair believed to be Mueller's, but the refinery was empty.

A Mueller family spokesman said that Mueller's parents "often communicated with the White House in trying to free their daughter."

In the summer of 2014, as other options were exhausted, Mueller's parents asked President Barack Obama in a letter to consider trading her for Aafia Siddiqui, a convicted terrorist serving 86 years in federal prison; Siddiqui's release has been a long-sought demand of ISIS and al-Qaeda.

The proposed exchange did not take place; the Obama administration had also rejected demands from other militant groups to exchange Siddiqui.

Catherine Herridge of Fox News reported via anonymous sources that the location of Mueller and other American hostages was known by the White House in May 2014.

However, a decision regarding a rescue mission was not made for seven weeks, because the White House had asked for further intelligence to be obtained.

By that time, the hostages had been dispersed.

2015

In 2015, she was killed in uncertain circumstances.

The operation that killed ISIS leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi was named Operation Kayla Mueller, in her honor.

Mueller was a native of Prescott, Arizona.

In August 2015, the New York Times reported that Mueller had been forced into marriage to Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, the leader of ISIS, who raped her repeatedly.

She had also been tortured.

It had also been reported in May 2015 that Mueller was a "personal captive" of Abu Sayyaf.

In August 2015, ABC News reported that Abu Sayyaf's widow, Umm Sayyaf, had confirmed that al-Baghdadi had been Mueller's primary abuser.

Fellow captives who were released or escaped reported Mueller's strength and compassion.

She was concerned for the safety of others, even intentionally passing up an escape attempt to give other women a better chance at freedom.

After months of prolonged torture and abuse, ISIS members, who are known for their persecution of Christians, attempted to use her as propaganda by claiming she had abandoned the Christian faith in front of other prisoners who were men, but she denied it.

Daniel Rye Ottosen, a Danish freelance photographer and fellow captive, said that the men in the room "...were impressed by the strength that she showed in front of us. That was very clear."

On February 6, 2015, a media account affiliated with ISIS released a statement claiming that a female American hostage held by the group was killed by one of around a dozen Jordanian airstrikes in Raqqa.

The statement came just days after the release of a video showing the burning alive of a Jordanian fighter pilot, Muath al-Kasasbeh, by ISIS and the subsequent execution of Sajida Mubarak Atrous al-Rishawi and other prisoners of Jordan.