Wives of ISIS fighters have revealed their concerns about how much their husbands were spending on sex slaves' clothes and lipstick but paid no heed to their barbaric beheadings.

The women, dubbed the desperate housewives of Raqqa, spoke to a journalist from their homes in a small town of Ayn Issa, 30 miles north of the terror group's de facto capital.

They refused to condemn their husbands' murderous crimes but said their husbands and their extremist cronies were paying up to $10,000 for a virgin sex slave and admitted girls as young as nine were raped.

Girls look at Lebanese Nour al-Huda, wife of a former Islamic State fighter, at a camp for displaced people in Ain Issa, north of Raqqa, Syria

(From left to right) Tunisians Khadouja al-Humri, Iman Othman and Lebanese Nour al-Huda, wives of former Islamic State fighters, sit with their children at a camp for displaced people in Ain Issa, north of Raqqa, Syria June 21

Seven of the women spoke to Jenan Moussa, a reporter for an Arabic TV channel, as they spent time with their children whose fathers are either dead or in prison.

She sat and spoke to Lebanese, Tunisian, Dagestan, Syrian women who had French, Malaysian, Tunisian and Turkish husbands.

One woman, a Lebanese wife, said her husband had a sex slave app on his phone where he and his fellow jihadis share pictures of captured women all tabbed up with a price ranging from $2,000 to $10,000 for a virgin.

'It was a market for sex slaves. They were sharing photos of the sex slaves with the best make-up.

'There was a lot of tension between the wives and the sex slaves.

'Some of the wives even divorced their husbands because of that.

'They were spending too much on the sex slaves, buying them the best make-up, clothes and accessories,' according to The Times.

One of the women said she had turned down countless ISIS fighters, insisting she was holding out for the terror group's leader Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, saying only he would satisfy her.

Jenan Moussa sitting with the ISIS wives and children in the displacement camp in Syria

Lebanese Nour al-Huda and Tunisian Iman Othman, wives of former Islamic State fighters, sit at a camp for displaced people in Ain Issa, north of Raqqa, Syria

A child looks out of the window at a displacement camp in Northern Syria as families sit on the floor

A journalist for an Arabic TV station Jenan Moussa conducted her interviews at the camp. There, she said she saw this Indonesian family who claimed they had fallen victim to ISIS but refused to talk to her

She was told by her fellow terror groupies no to waste their time.

'Don't bother, he is already taken,' one woman told her.

'He has four wives and 15 sex slaves. You have no chance.'

When asked if they personally had sex slaves in their homes, the women all denied it, but said they knew of nine-year-old girls who had been raped by jihadis.

But their stories did not add up with some wives admitted helping imprisoned sex slaves escape - not to help the trapped women - but because they were jealous their husbands were raping them.

Some of the husbands beheaded ISIS victims, but their wives insisted it was nothing to do with them because they were merely sat on the sofa minding their children.

And one even backed their partners' brutality, saying chopping off people's hands was fine because the person on the receiving end had been warned about stealing.

They are now stuck in limbo at a camp for displaced people in northern Syria claiming they wished they had never joined ISIS and that they were conned into becoming part of the terror group.

One told the Ms Moussa, 'ISIS deceived us with propaganda,' to which she replied: 'So you saw beheading videos and thought - great, lets' join ISIS?'

The wife did not reply and said their group were kept apart from other detainees because others wanted to attack anyone associated with ISIS.

None of the wives gave themselves up voluntarily, but were apprehended by officials as they attempted to cross the border into Turkey.