A YOUNG woman who has just won the Nobel Peace Prize has revealed horrifying details of being forced into sexual slavery by ISIS.

Nadia Murad, 25, spoke of how she and other Yazidi women screamed and vomited in sheer fear when jihadis kidnapped them.

6 Nobel cause ... Nadia Murad has campaigned for awareness of human trafficking Credit: Getty - Contributor

At age 19, ISIS soldiers attacked the Yazidi community in her village, killing 600 people including six of her brothers and stepbrothers.

She was taken into slavery and beaten, burned with cigarettes and raped when she tried to escape.

Writing in her autobiography featured in The Guardian, Nadia recalled one night at a slave market following her capture.

She said: "We could hear the commotion downstairs where militants were registering and organising, and when the first man entered the room, all the girls started screaming."

6 Nadia Murad, seen here arriving at the Glamour Women Of The Year 2016, was able to escape ISIS capture by smuggling herself out of Iraq Credit: Getty - Contributor

6 Nadia Murad had been living a normal life in Northern Iraq when in 2014 she was abducted Credit: EPA

6 File photo showing captured girls in ISIS territory Credit: Alalam.ir

Nadia's book, "The Last Girl," tells of her captivity, the loss of her family and her eventual escape.

It featured, recalls in harrowing detail this examination process before she was sold like cattle.

She said: “The militants touched us anywhere they wanted, running their hands over our breasts and our legs, as if we were animals.”

But her ordeal worsened when she met a high-ranking militant named Salwan - whom she described as “looking like a monster”.

6 Nadia addresses the 71st session of the UN General Assembly Credit: AP:Associated Press

6 The young woman is now fighting for other victims of sex slavery Credit: Getty Images - Getty

Nadia said: “He could crush me with his bare hands.

“No matter what he did, and no matter how much I resisted, I would never be able to fight him off. He smelled of rotten eggs and cologne.”

She has since become a UN goodwill ambassador for the dignity of survivors of human trafficking.

On Friday, she was announced to be a Nobel Peace Prize winner at the Norwegian Nobel Institute in Oslo.

Berit Reiss-Andersen, chair of the Norwegian Nobel Committee, said Murad had "shown uncommon courage in recounting her own suffering and speaking up on behalf of other victims".

Tour of the Syrian hotel that ISIS transformed into torture chamber

We pay for your stories! Do you have a story for The Sun Online news team? Email us at tips@the-sun.co.uk or call 0207 782 4368. You can WhatsApp us on 07810 791 502. We pay for videos too. Click here to upload yours.