The first Miss Iraq since 1972 has reportedly received a threatening phone call from Isis - demanding she join their ranks or be kidnapped.

Shaymaa Qasim Abdelrahman, 20, became the first winner of the national beauty pageant in more than 40 years.

But according to the Jerusalem Post, which cited Kuwaiti Daily al-Watan, she received a phone call following her win saying she would be kidnapped if she refused to become a member of the militant group.

The pageant's organisers said Miss Abdelrahman was distressed but determined to “continue forward despite any obstacles”.

The beauty queen, from Kirkuk in northern Iraq, told NBC News: “I want to prove that the Iraqi woman has her own existence in society, she has her rights like men. I am afraid of nothing, because I am confident what I am doing is not wrong.”

The pageant has been fraught with controversy, prompting a backlash from religious hardliners with a number of contestants receiving death threats.

A total of 200 contestants were scheduled to take part, but fewer than 10 women participated in the final because of the threats, according to Crave Magazine.

Miss Iraq 2015 Show all 6 1 /6 Miss Iraq 2015 Miss Iraq 2015 The winner and the runner-up Iraqi Farah Naseer (R) smiles after being named first runner-up in the Miss Iraq beauty contest, as Shaymaa Qasim Abdelrahman wins Getty Miss Iraq 2015 Miss Iraq contestants Some of the contestants pose before the crowd Getty Miss Iraq 2015 Shaymaa Qasim Abdelrahman, the winner Shaymaa Qasim Abdelrahman before winning the competition Getty Miss Iraq 2015 Babylon The contestants go on a trip to Babylon prior to the competition Miss Iraq 2015 Miss Iraq contestants Some of the contestants pose before the crowd Getty Miss Iraq 2015 Shaymaa Qasim Abdelrahma Shaymaa Qasim Abdelrahma, the winner of Miss Iraq Getty

Pageant director Ahmed Leith said the pageant was necessary to create a “sense of normalcy”.

“Iraq needed this,” he said. “The situation is weak here and we wanted to celebrate this the same way other countries like Lebanon and others do. To have a sense of normalcy.”

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Organisers attempted to adapt aspects of the pageant to keep it in line with the sensibilities of a conservative Muslim country, such as scrapping the swimsuit element of the contest.