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Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Oct 14, 2021 10:29 pm

Missing for Seven Years:

Religious and Human Rights Groups Urge Governments to Work to Save Yazidi Women and Children

Image
The Yazidi people turn their faces towards the sun twice a day for prayer

Church of Scientology joins diverse international organizations in urging immediate attention to the travesty of 2,763 missing following the 2014 genocide

The fate of the missing Yazidis cannot be forgotten. ‘Never again’ implies an international commitment to prevent genocide and rescue those victims who can be rescued.”

— Rev. Susan Taylor, Church of Scientology National Affairs Office

WASHINGTON, DC, USA, October 14, 2021 /EINPresswire.com/ -- Where are they? Are they alive? What has been the fate of these kidnapped, enslaved and persecuted women and children?

While the plight of the Yazidis in northern Iraq dominated the headlines following the 2014 persecution, they have since been all but forgotten by the major media and many international governments. Attention has, understandably, turned to fighting COVID and other international issues, but the Yazidis cannot be forgotten.

In response to confirmed reports by the United Nations and other organizations, of genocide by ISIS/ISIL against the Yazidi religious people, a diverse group of religious, peace, and human rights organizations from around the world jointly urged governments to take action on behalf of the missing Yazidi women and children, 2,763 of whom have been missing for seven years.

In a letter signed by 99 organizations and individuals, addressed to Secretary of State Antony Blinken and foreign ministers and executives in the European Union, Germany, France, Canada, and the United Kingdom, the group brought attention back to the plight of the missing Yazidi women and children.

The world has recognized that genocide was committed by ISIS/ISIL against the Yazidi people. Yet seven years after the attacks, these women and children remain unaccounted for.

The letter proclaims, “Seven years after the genocide, it is a travesty that the Yazidi women and children remain missing and their fate unknown. If they are alive, they continue to be enslaved and subjected to daily abuse. Despite findings of genocide and repeated pronouncements expressing concern for Yazidis, the international community has failed to organize any effort to locate these kidnapped individuals.”

The letter calls upon the international community to: “Work with partners to conduct an official search to identify the whereabouts of the missing women and children, including in the Al-Hol camp in Syria where many are believed to be held; and work with local partners to free all Yazidi women and children who are alive and ensure that the remains of those killed are returned to their families and given a dignified and honourable burial.”

Organizations, ranging from Christian Solidarity Worldwide, Coalition for Genocide Response, Free Yezidi Foundation, the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office, Humanists UK, and the Religious Freedom & Business Foundation joined with distinguished individuals including Lord Alton of Liverpool, UK House of Lords; Baroness Helena Kennedy QC, UK House of Lords, Director of the International Bar Association’s Human Rights Institute; and Nadine Maenza, Chair, U.S. Commission on International Religious Freedom, are bringing this to international attention and urging immediate action to find and return the missing Yazidis.

The letter was circulated amongst members of the International Religious Freedom Roundtable for cooperation between organizations. The Roundtable, organized in 2010, has become the premier platform in Washington, DC, for practical policy discussions and coordination between civil society, government, and multilateral organizations. It has attracted representatives from some 300 organizations and launched more than 200 multifaith initiatives. These initiatives have been deployed by and for people from across the theological and political spectrum. The Roundtable meets weekly and works closely with government offices including the US State Department’s International Religious Freedom Office and the US Commission on International Religious Freedom.

Rev. Susan Taylor of the Church of Scientology National Affairs Office, an active member of the IRF Roundtable since 2010, noted, “We can not tolerate such horrible abuses against humanity. There will be no lasting peace until all faiths, majority and minority alike, are respected by all peoples, all the time. The fate of the missing Yazidis cannot be forgotten. ‘Never again’ implies an international commitment to prevent genocide and rescue those victims who can be rescued.”

The Church of Scientology has since its inception stood for freedom of religion and human rights for all, as stated in its creed written by L. Ron Hubbard in 1954. The Church also supports educational programs such as United for Human Rights and Youth for Human Rights International which teach the 30 articles of the United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights, stressing the importance of religious freedom, no slavery and freedom from torture. Together they sponsor national and international summits and roundtables. United for Human Rights and Youth for Human Rights International provide free educational materials to help make human rights a reality.

References:

Islamic state committed genocide against the Yazidis:
https://apnews.com/article/islamic-stat ... 56e5d0339f

Missing for seven years:
https://www.voanews.com/a/extremism-wat ... 09078.html

International letter:
https://www.freeyezidi.org/blog/letter- ... -children/

International Religious Freedom Roundtable Washington, DC:
http://www.irfroundtable.org

United Nations Universal Declaration of Human Rights:
http://www.un.org/en/about-us/universal ... man-rights

Creed of the Church of Scientology:
https://www.scientology.org/what-is-sci ... hurch.html

Youth for Human Rights International:
http://www.youthforhumanrights.org

Church of Scientology:
http://www.scientologyreligion.org

Rev. Susan Taylor
National Affairs Office
+1 202-667-6404
email us here

https://www.einnews.com/pr_news/5537857 ... d-children
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 16, 2021 10:34 am

U.S. didn't violate crime victims' law in ISIS case

Federal magistrate judge said U.S. crime victims' law doesn't extend overseas in response to court fight, Yazidi women as crime victims under U.S. law

A U.S. magistrate judge said on Friday that the U.S. Justice Department had fulfilled obligations under federal law to keep a group of Yazidi women, as crime victims, informed about the detention and prosecution of the widow of an Islamic State figure.

Judge Theresa Buchanan of the U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia from the bench rejected a bid from the five Yazidi women to enforce rights under the federal Crime Victims' Rights Act (CVRA). The women asserted in a court filing that the defendant either participated in or supported physical and emotional abuse.

The defendant, Nisreen Assad Ibrahim Bahar, also known as Umm Sayyaf, is in custody in Iraq serving a life sentence, a U.S. prosecutor said on Friday. The DOJ in 2016 charged Sayyaf with providing material support to the Islamic State, but she has not been extradited to the U.S. Buchanan said the CVRA does not extend to overseas prosecutions.

Lawyers for the Yazidi women assert they should have had a voice in the U.S. government's decision to transfer Sayyaf, once detained by U.S. forces, to Iraqi custody in 2015. The women are seeking information about proceedings against Sayyaf in Iraq and information about her detention.

Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher represents the Yazidi victims with human rights lawyer Amal Clooney and the Center for Justice & Accountability. A lawyer for the government, Dennis Fitzpatrick, did not immediately return messages seeking comment on Friday.

"The government has given us some of this information, but not very much," Gibson Dunn partner Zainab Ahmad, co-chair of the firm's national security practice, said in court. She added, "We don't know what the government has asked, or what effort they have made to get that information."

Ahmad told Reuters after the hearing that the "biggest victory" was the Justice Department's recognition, in response to a push in court, that the Yazidi women were crime victims under U.S. law. She said for many years the government had declined to take a position.

Sayyaf was charged for her role in an alleged conspiracy linked to the death of an American citizen. Buchanan said the U.S. should share with the Yazidi victims any information that was disclosed to the parents of Kayla Mueller.

The case is United States v. Nisreen Assad Ibrahim Bahar a/k/a Umm Sayyaf, U.S. District Court for the Eastern District of Virginia, No. 1:16-mj-63-MSN.

https://www.reuters.com/legal/litigatio ... 021-10-15/
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Oct 18, 2021 10:21 am

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President Masoud Barzani congratulates Sinjar

ERBIL (Kurdistan 24) – Masoud Barzani, President of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), congratulated KDP members and supporters in Nineveh Plain and Sinjar for their victory in the Iraqi parliamentary elections in a message to them on Sunday

“I congratulate the KDP members and supporters at the KDP’s 17th and 14th party offices for their discipline and hard work that resulted in the party’s success in this area,” Barzani said.

“I would also like to send a special thank and gratitude for the patience of the people of Nineveh Plain, our Yezidi brothers and sisters in Sinjar, and the other components who [through their vote] responded to the KDP’s stance and sacrifices.”

In his congratulatory message, Barzani also said that the KDP will remain a supporter and protector of the rights and dignity of the peoples of these regions.

“The people of Nineveh Plain and Sinjar gave a clear message to everyone about who they want and what they want,” he said.

https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/story/25 ... -victories
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 19, 2021 11:12 pm

Giving genocide denial a platform:
    ISIS, the media and the Yazidis

When the Dutch journalist Judit Neurink and her friends heard of the takeover of northern Iraq by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) from her base in Irbil (or Erbil), the capital of Iraqi Kurdistan, they were surprised

Neurink, a Middle East specialist and editor of one of the leading Dutch daily papers, Trouw in Amsterdam, moved to Irbil in 2008. During the time she spent there, apart from reporting, she set up a media centre to train journalists and teach politicians and the police how to work with the media. She wrote her sixth book, The Women of the Caliphate, which described life inside ISIS territory, published in 2016. Yet, she had been as shocked as anyone when ISIS occupied Mosul, just 50 miles from Irbil and only 250 miles from Baghdad, on June 10, 2014.

Within two days, and with only an estimated 1,500 fighters, ISIS had overrun Iraq’s second-largest city, with a population of about one-and-a-half million people. The Iraqi troops simply melted away. It was hardly a fight.

On August 3, 2014, reports emerged of a massacre of the Yazidi people, and ISIS atrocities against one of Iraq’s most vulnerable minorities hit the front pages. Men, women and children began to flee from their ancient homeland of Sinjar in northern Iraq. ISIS abducted thousands of girls and women and documented everything via social media. ISIS killed men and boys, kidnapped women and children, and created 500,000 refugees; they trafficked, crucified, beheaded and buried people alive.

The world woke up to the beginning of a genocide, as defined by the 1948 UN Convention for the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide. ISIS had begun its systematic plan to annihilate the Yazidis.

When the stories came out about beheadings in the streets of Sinjar, Neurink “couldn’t believe it”. Their crimes were so brutal that nobody could imagine “a group was abusing Islam in this way,” she says. They tried to justify the genocide, based on selective quotation of passages from the Quran.

“Holding slaves? We couldn’t imagine that; nobody could imagine it. Even me, I mean, having lived in Iraq. We were like, who made this up? Why are they making it up? And then, of course, we found that it was true, and we found it mainly because of the women who were able to escape.”

These were women who had been taken by the truckload and sold as slaves. There were true stories of burning women in cages who refused to marry ISIS or foreign fighters. The militants drowned people and buried women and children alive. The world began to really understand what kind of group ISIS was. “Up till that moment, we were all guessing,” says Neurink.

By November 2015, ISIS had been defeated, and Sinjar was free. Neurink was then able to start interviewing the women and girls who had survived. But as she heard the stories, she couldn’t make sense of them. They were an “absolute jumble” in her head. She would talk to three or four women and children a day, and it was terrible. “It was too much for me. I would get home, and the day after, I would want to stay in my bed. I didn’t want to do anything. I was really completely exhausted. I couldn’t concentrate because the stories were just too bad.”

The women and girls told her of being forced to marry. Still, it took her two interviews to realise they were not talking about a ceremony with an imam or even a sales contract. In a society where extramarital sex is taboo, it was the only way the women could express the fact that they had been raped. This is also a society where women are held responsible for being raped and then ostracised by the community for bringing shame on the family’s honour. “Once I realised what they were saying, it made it much easier to interview them. The cat was out of the bag.”

One of the many stories that Neurink documented was that of a 13-year old girl she nicknamed Smile because of her constant grin. She had been “married” many times. She was taken to her captor’s house in Mosul where she repeatedly tried to run away but each time had been caught. The result was she was put in a “prison”, she told Neurink, but the prison wasn’t really a prison. It was a factory compound where ISIS installed the captured girls, and it functioned as a brothel. Smile was locked in one of those portacabins, and every evening ISIS fighters would come to rape her and the other women.

One day, the light went on in Neurink’s head when she was talking to Smile. Until then, she couldn’t interpret that permanent rictus-like grin on the teenager’s face, then Neurink realised that the Smile wasn’t real. The Smile that was pasted on her face was her way of dealing with the trauma. “She was trying to ward off this scary world by smiling at everybody. That was definitely one of the worst stories.”

ISIS had no compunction when it came to violating girls, as they believed that from the age of nine, girls were fit for sex. The ones Neurink talked with had escaped, but later the tactics changed, and families could buy back their sisters, wives and mothers — for a lot of money.

Many foreign female recruits were excited by the prospect of living in an Islamic State. While there was nothing new about women being involved in violent and extremist groups, a very high proportion of women joined. About 20 per cent of the foreign fighters came from Europe. About 1000 women from North Africa, North America, Central and Southeast Asia brought their children.

ISIS had made promises to women, which led to an unprecedented number of foreign women joining the ranks. Neurink found that some women had already converted but were looking for the knight in shining armour. Some wanted to live the religion, which is why they were attracted to going to Syria. They bought into the ISIS propaganda that the battle in Syria needed Muslims to fight and establish their own Islamic state. That was one important reason to go. Many women thought they were going to be part of something that would make history.

The women also helped the men when raping women, believing it was their Islamic duty — or in some cases, sadistic pleasure — to prepare the girls. Neurink writes in her book of a woman who held down a survivor who had put up a fight because “it was what God wanted”. The women of ISIS were not innocent bystanders, they enforced the morality laws, and there was little solidarity between women. In the beginning, Neurink thinks some didn’t “really realise what they were signing up for, but after 2014, no one could claim ignorance”.

Finding out the exact role the women played is difficult. Still, Neurink believes women at the very least made it possible for their husbands to go to work every day, and they raised children for the caliphate. Which made them accomplices to ISIS’ crimes.

When Laura Hansen moved to ISIS-controlled Syria, she was four years older than the then 15-year old East London schoolgirl Shamima Begum. A convert to Islam, she and her partner took their two children from the Netherlands in 2015. A year later, she escaped from Mosul, Iraq with her children and returned to Holland. She was tried, found guilty of terrorist crimes and given a 24-month sentence (13 months of which was suspended). Her perspective was clear: “They deserve it”, she WhatsApp’d her father.

Since then, “Laura H” has been the subject of a book that has been awarded a literary prize. She is the subject of a play and a podcast, all in Dutch, making it easier for perpetrators like her to tell their stories. It’s an advantage the survivors don’t have, as they haven’t mastered the language of their new home. Her story is told from her perspective, leaving members of the Yazidi community feeling voiceless. To them, the curiosity of the media about the perpetrators is akin to giving genocide denial a platform.

In a Christmas special on Dutch national TV, Laura H told her story, without even mentioning the Yazidi genocide. She moved to Syria after ISIS attacked the Yazidi community. She was not asked about her or her husband’s participation in the war. When the audience critiqued the programme, the programme makers felt the “human interest” angle justified its production and that people should take “forgiveness” under consideration.

Let’s also not forget that terrorist organisations and their members know how the media works. They know how to use it to silence their victims. One of ISIS’s current techniques is to portray themselves as victims. It assists ISIS in minimising or erasing what has happened under the so-called caliphate’s rule. Dutch I.S. members, like Laura H, continue to minimise the scale and severity of their time in Syria and Iraq. They claim they didn’t know of the crimes that ISIS committed while they were there, though they were often participants.

“All this takes away the attention from the victims,” concludes Neurink. “These ladies are not going to tell us anything about the victims. They’re too clever for that.”

Denying survivors a voice assists ISIS in minimising or erasing what has happened under the so-called caliphate’s rule. Genocide scholar Robert G Hovisian says that the last step of genocide is silencing victims’ voices. He believes “complete annihilation of a people requires the banishment of recollection and suffocation of remembrance. Falsification, deception and half-truths reduce what was to what might have been or perhaps what was not at all.”

The ideology didn’t die when Isis faded away the first time, which is true now. There are probably 30,000 ISIS members roaming around Iraq and Syria, where they are still active. The situation in both countries is unstable. Young Iraqis are protesting against their corrupt government in a country with no services, no jobs, and a small group with all the money. The Shias, who are in power, have not looked after all their people, and there is extensive poverty in an oil-rich country. What future does almost sixty per cent of the population who are under 25 have? “ISIS is active, and leaders have promised that the caliphate will return,” warns Neurink.

https://www.thearticle.com/giving-genoc ... he-yazidis
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Oct 20, 2021 8:34 pm

Sinjar - ISIS From a Female Standpoint

Claimed by both Iraq and Kurdistan, the town of Sinjar in northern Iraq was the site of an ISIS massacre of the Yazidi people in 2014 that lead to a devastating situation which human rights organizations call genocide. The town gives its name to the latest film from Spanish director Anna M. Bofarull who also wrote the narrative feature

Bofarull co-produced with Spain’s KaBoGa and U.S. company Genius at Large. Barcelona-based Filmax took international rights earlier this year, and is releasing the film in Spain. The film follows several real life stories and takes us inside the conflict from these women’s experience of rape, sexual slavery and abuse.

The film was shot partly in northern Iraq. Top-liners include Nora Navas, Halima Ilter and Eman Eido, a Yazidi woman who was held hostage by ISIS for several years. Variety spoke with Anna Bofarull about the film.

Eman Eido is a young Yazidi woman who was captured and held hostage by ISIS for four years. How did she survive this? How did this real life experience inform the film?

Eman was captured when she was 9-years-old and was immediately sold to an ISIS supporter and married to him. Her life completely changed after that. She was separated from her family, her childhood abruptly finished and she became an abused wife. She was later sold again and re-married, considered not more than an object. She managed to escape when she was 13-years-old, being a strong teenager ready to fight for a new life.

The shooting of Sinjar took place as she was 15-years-old, and was living in a refugee camp. All of her past experiences were in her gaze, in her movements, and I wanted to add that to Arjin’s character, as this was unique. But, at the same time, it was a challenge to work with her, as she had no acting skills and we were working with real feelings and experiences.

You decided to show some of the horrors of ISIS and their wars through the perspectives of various women. What do you think their points of view and experience shows us about this situation, and how is this different to other films on the subject?

I wanted to explore how daily life can change with horrors that you cannot control. I wanted to bring Yazidi women’s life close to the screen and show to Western audiences that women living in the Middle East suffer as much as any others and are never prepared for that. And that, at the same time, foreign wars can also break into the reality of European women (as Carlota, the woman living in Barcelona and played by Nora Navas, experiences in the film).

I wanted to explore how women in these situations need to adapt, how they need to survive. It is not just one day or one week of horror, but long months and even years for some of them, and I was surprised how Yazidi sex slaves under ISIS were able to survive one day after another, lots of them even with their children. That routine is something that I could not find in other films portraying life under ISIS.

Why did you decide to make this film? How did you come to this story, and how did you connect with these women?

After the ISIS invasion of the Sinjar area, I started to discover a lot of details about Yazidi women’s lives under ISIS, and how they were turned into sex slaves. I was really shocked. I could not realize how at that moment, in another place in the world, this could happen. And I travelled to Iraqi Kurdistan. I interviewed many women and children in refugee camps who had managed to escape ISIS territory and their experience deeply moved me. I committed to tell their experience, how women tried to survive to protect their children, how young girls had lost everything and just decided to fight ISIS until the end. And I also discovered how Western mothers had lost their kids to ISIS, as they escaped to join the Caliphate.

Do you feel under threat from addressing this subject by ISIS? Are these women under threat?

I am not feeling under threat right now, as ISIS lost their power and territory before we started filming. But it is true that this project scared some producers at the beginning and they refused to get involved, fearing some consequences. Most Yazidi women are not under threat right now, although lots of them are living in refugee camps as their homes were destroyed and the Sinjar area is still insecure and the target of bombings by the Turkish army. Some Yazidi women and children are still missing, probably living with former ISIS supporters.

For how long did you shoot? When and where? And what were the challenges?

We were shooting for six weeks in Iraqi Kurdistan, close to the Sinjar area, in real locations and with a lot of real actors. We got the support of the local Yazidi community and the Kurdish army, who were committed to the film and helped a lot. And suddenly the Covid pandemic started, with a Spanish-German women-only crew blocked in Iraq. After finishing the shoot all the crew were locked down inside a house, the house where one of the characters remains enslaved. The Spanish army managed to bring us back home. We managed to finish the filming in Barcelona in November, with many Covid precautions in place.

https://variety.com/2021/film/features/ ... 235093763/
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Oct 23, 2021 3:22 pm

Yazidi confirmed victims

Yazidi genocide survivors confirmed 'victims' in US case against female ISIS member

The recognition by the court in Virginia follows years of inertia in proceedings against ISIS member Umm Sayyaf, who was captured by US forces back in 2015.

    Almost 3,000 Yazidi women and children are still missing, more than seven years since genocide at the hands of the Islamic State began
Five female Yazidi genocide survivors have been formally recognised as victims by a US court in a case against a female Islamic State member.

The five women were enslaved and raped while held by Umm Sayyaf and her husband, top ISIS financier Abu Sayyaf, at their house in the town of Al-Shaddadi, northeastern Syria.

The women are represented by Amal Clooney - a renowned lawyer working on other Yazidi genocide cases - the Centre for Justice and Accountability, and Gibson, Dunn & Crutcher LLP.

"The Yazidi women are all victims of horrific crimes perpetrated by Umm Sayyaf and believe that she should be prosecuted in the United States for her role in the genocide of the Yazidis," the Doughty Street Chambers, where Clooney is a barrister, said in a Friday press release.

Four of the Yazidi women were kidnapped as teenagers during the ISIS onslaught in 2014 in the Sinjar region of northwestern Iraq - the heartland of the ethnoreligious minority group.

    In-depth: #Iraq has passed a landmark new bill offering reparations to victims of the Islamic State and formally recognising the #Yazidi genocide. Survivors say it is an important first step https://t.co/ULwck8LrV6
    — The New Arab (@The_NewArab) March 3, 2021
The recognition by the court in Virginia follows years of inertia in proceedings against Umm Sayyaf, who was captured by US forces back in 2015.

The US government filed a criminal complaint against her, but only for conspiring to provide material to support ISIS. She was handed over to the authorities in Iraqi Kurdistan, where she has been held ever since.

The case lay dormant for years. The US refused to formally recognise the women as crime victims and did not provide them with information about proceedings against Umm Sayyaf in Iraqi Kurdistan, despite repeated requests.

The women filed the motion to be recognised as crime victims in April of this year, and again requested information on Umm Sayyaf and the proceedings against her.

The government has since granted them information on Umm Sayyaf's case.

More than seven years since the genocide began, almost 3,000 Yazidi women and children are still missing.

    International efforts to find them have been slow
Earlier this week, the US State Department released a statement expressing "grave concern" at the number of Yazidis yet to be found.

https://english.alaraby.co.uk/news/yazi ... inst-woman
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Oct 25, 2021 12:19 pm

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Jennifer Wenisch in court, covering her face with a folder

German ISIS woman jailed

A German Muslim convert who joined the Islamic State group in Iraq has been jailed for 10 years in Munich over the killing of a Yazidi girl she and her husband had bought as a slave

Jennifer Wenisch was judged to have been an accomplice to a war crime, having stood by when her husband left the five-year-old to die of thirst, chained outside in the blazing sun.

Wenisch's husband, an Iraqi jihadist, is on trial in Frankfurt.

The girl died in Fallujah in 2015

Wenisch, 30, denied the charge. Her lawyers said the child's mother Nora was an unreliable witness, and they alleged there was no evidence the girl had actually died. Nora and the girl had been enslaved by ISIS, along with many other Yazidi.

The verdict on the husband, Taha al-Jumailly, is expected next month.

It is one of the first cases of an ISIS crime against the Yazidi community going to trial. The Yazidi, a Kurdish group from northern Iraq, were a particular target of IS brutality.

Wenisch stood trial in Germany because of the legal principle of universal jurisdiction, which allows prosecutions for alleged war crimes, including genocide, occurring overseas. She was arrested in Turkey in 2016, then extradited to Germany, AFP news agency reports.

Wenisch allegedly served in an ISIS "anti-vice squad" which enforced strict Islamic rules in Mosul and Fallujah.

London-based human rights lawyer Amal Clooney was part of the legal team representing the girl's mother.

In 2014 ISIS fighters stormed into the ancestral heartland of the Yazidi people in northern Iraq, seizing thousands of women and children as slaves.

https://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-europe-59036964
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 26, 2021 1:51 am

Organizations welcome court sentence

Yazidi organizations on Monday welcomed a German court decision to sentence a woman member of the Islamic State (ISIS) who let a Yazidi girl die while holding her captive to ten years in prison

“Like many other women who joined ISIS, Wenisch, who travelled to Iraq in 2014, was not merely an “ISIS bride,” but played an active role in the enslavement and genocide of the Yezidi people. Along with her husband, Wenisch took a Yezidi woman and her daughter as slaves in Mosul,” Free Yezidi Foundation said in a statement.

"FYF applauds Germany’s efforts in prosecuting ISIS crimes against the Yezidis, including the earlier trial of ISIS member Omaima Abdi,” they added.

Jennifer Wenisch, a German woman who joined the ISIS group, was accused of enslaving a five-year-old Yazidi girl and her mother. According to
court documents, Wenisch chained the girl to a window in the summer of 2015. The child died in the heat.

Wenisch’s trial is one of several against ISIS women accused of holding Yezidi slaves in Iraq and Syria. Last year, a German court sentenced Omaima Abdi to three-and-a-half years in prison. She was found guilty of being a member of ISIS and enslaving a child.

“This conviction will mean a lot to ISIS survivors,” Natia Navrouzov, Legal Advocacy Director at global Yazidi NGO Yazda, said. “We commend Germany for its leadership in prosecuting ISIS crimes and ask other States to follow the same example because the story of the survivor in this case is one of many others who have also suffered,” she added.

ISIS swept across Iraq and Syria in the summer of 2014. Minority groups especially suffered under the terror group's rule, including Yazidis, Shabaks, and Christians. A United Nations investigation found there is evidence ISIS committed genocide against the Yazidis.

More than 6,000 Yazidis were kidnapped when ISIS attacked their heartland of Shingal in Nineveh province, according to the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) Office for Rescuing Kidnapped Yazidis. Around 3,000 remain missing.

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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 26, 2021 2:05 am

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Milena lives in the attic with her parents, brothers, and sister

14-year-old threatened with deportation
Wladimir van Wilgenburg

ERBIL (Kurdistan 24) – Milena, a 14-year old Yezidi girl from Armenia, has hidden in an attic for more than two years out of fear she will be deported from the Netherlands

Her family is from Armenia and has lived in the Netherlands for 12 years. However, they were not able to obtain a residency permit.

They are afraid to return to Armenia because Milena's father fears for his life there.

With the support of lawyer ​​Eliza Tsjoepieva, the family started a petition to ensure that Milena can stay in the Netherlands. So far, the petition has gotten 15,000 signatures.

Milena's lawyer Tsjoepieva told Dutch journalist Brenda Stoter Boscolo that the 14-year-old has lived all her life in the Netherlands.

"She is part of the (Dutch) society," Tsjoepieva said. "That she was all this time (been an) illegal (here), is because of a choice of her parents."

"You cannot blame her for these choices (made) out of necessity."

The petition points out that Milena completed most of her education in Dutch and is fluent in the Dutch language. Therefore, according to Article 8 of the European Convention on Human Rights, she must remain in the Netherlands.

"The government should make an exception," said those who filed the petition. "This is a special case, and the government should implicitly look to the specific individual case of a minor."

"It's ridiculous and inhumane to see a 14-year-old Yezidi girl hiding in an attic since 2018," the Dutch Yezidi activist Wahhab Hassoo told Kurdistan 24.

"This time not from ISIS, but Dutch repatriation police."

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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Oct 26, 2021 11:25 pm

Seeking justice for her community
news@theeagleonline.com

Nobel Peace Prize laureate and human rights activist Nadia Murad discussed the importance of her work as an advocate for survivors of genocide and sexual violence in a virtual event hosted by the School of International Service on 19 October

Murad has used her story of surviving imprisonment by ISIS during the Yazidi ethnic cleansing to found Nadia’s Initiative, a nonprofit dedicated to rebuilding communities in crisis and advocating globally for survivors of sexual violence.

“I started Nadia’s Initiative because I wanted to be able to create sustainable solutions for my community’s recovery,” Murad said.

Murad’s life was uprooted when ISIS attacked her village in 2014 during the Sinjar Massacre, a religious persecution of the Yazidi people in Sinjar, Iraq. Murad, along with thousands of other young Yazidi women, was taken prisoner and subjected to daily sexual violence for three months before she was able to escape to a refugee camp and eventually move to Germany, where she now lives.

The conversation was moderated by SIS professor Tazreena Sajjad, who asked Murad what justice would look like for her and the other women and girls of Sinjar.

“Nadia’s Initiative and Yazidi activists are striving for holistic and reparative justice,” Murad said. “This means holding ISIS accountable for genocide and sexual violence, not just terrorism.”

Since her escape, Murad has published a New York Times bestselling memoir, “The Last Girl: My Story of Captivity, and My Fight Against the Islamic State,” to raise awareness about the ongoing plight of the Yazidi people. She now works with both local and global leaders on the sustainable redevelopment of the Yazidi homeland to restore their education, healthcare and culture.

“The majority of the Yazidi community is still displaced in camps, only a few hours away from their homes,” she said. “They are unable to return because Sinjar’s basic infrastructure, clean water, roads, schools, houses and hospitals, were destroyed.”

Nadia’s Initiative is currently working with various international governments, the United Nations, nongovernmental organizations and survivors living in Sinjar. The restorative measures have so far helped erect schools, farms and hospitals, allowing a growing number of Yazidis to return home.

Regarding the misconceptions that people may have about displaced women and girls, Murad said it is important to acknowledge their stories while also respecting their power and agency.

“We need to do more to protect the rights and safety of women and girls from conflict-related sexual violence, but we should never think that they are weak or helpless,” Murad said. “It is this kind of thinking that justifies misogyny. Women and girls have a really important role to play in post-conflict peace building and development. They have so much to contribute to our societies, but they are only empowered to do so if their basic rights are respected.”

Despite her organization’s progress, Murad said there is still a long road ahead with locating and rescuing the many Yazidis that remain in ISIS captivity, some of whom are her own family.

“There are still about 2,800 Yazidis missing in captivity, including my niece, my nephew and my sister-in-law,” Murad said. “We still don’t know where they are.”

Murad cautioned her audience against letting stories of war overshadow the human element, encouraging listeners to also learn about the culture and people of minority communities so their voices get heard.

“There is more to the Middle East than oil and war,” Murad said. “There are people just like you who want to build a better world. In your studies, I hope you will all seek to understand how common and marginalized people are affected. I believe this understanding will be a bridge to collaboration and changes.”

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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Oct 29, 2021 3:35 pm

The Missing Must Not Be Forgotten

How Activists, Including Nobel Winner Nadia Murad, Are Advocating For Missing Yazidi Women And Children

Nadia's Initiative

August 3, 2014, is seared in the memories of the Yazidis worldwide as the day ISIS invaded the northern Iraqi region of Sinjar, home to predominantly Yazidi population and their ancient cultural, religious sites. Some 400,000 Yazidi fled to the neighboring Kurdistan Region of Iraq and thousands took refuge on Mount Sinjar remaining isolated and near starvation before world powers intervened.

Some 3,000 to 5,000 Yazidi men and elderly women who couldn’t flee were slaughtered by ISIS (IS, Daesh). Weaponizing sexual violence, nearly 7,000 Yazidi women and girls, as young as nine, were enslaved, forcibly converted to Islam, married off to ISIS fighters and transferred throughout Iraq and eastern Syria.

Those attempting escape were gang raped. The abducted boys, as young as seven-years-old, were converted into Islam and child soldiers. Following the Sinjar attacks, ISIS invaded the Nineveh Plains (northeast of Mosul), forcing over 120,000 people to flee.

Finally, a coordinated rescue operation with Yazidi volunteer defenders, the Syrian Kurdish forces (YPG), Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), and an international coalition led by the U.S., opened a safe passage from Mount Sinjar to Syria for thousands of Yazidi.

In his briefing to the UN Security Council this May, Karim Asad Ahmad Khan QC, Special Adviser leading the Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Da’esh/ISIL (UNITAD) reported that independent, impartial investigations in compliance with international standards and UN best practices, show “clear and convincing evidence that the crimes against the Yazidi people clearly constituted genocide” and “shocked the conscience of humanity.”

Dr Ewelina U. Ochab, Lord Alton of Liverpool, peer at the UK House of Lords, and Jess Templeman, ... [+] Coalition for Genocide Response deliver the #BringBackTheYazidis petition letter to 10 Downing Street.

On the 7th anniversary of the Yazidi genocide this year, Dr. Ewelina U. Ochab, co-founder of the Coalition For Genocide Response, together with partners, launched the #BringBackTheYazidis campaign on the opening of the UN General Assembly session. In a joint letter signed by nearly 100 organizations and experts, several world leaders were called to ensure the missing Yazidi women and children “are located and reunited with their families.” It urged the powers to “locate the almost 3,000 Yazidi women and children, victims of forced or involuntary disappearances…..missing for seven years.”

“We joined forces on the issue, taking further steps in our advocacy efforts,” Ochab says the idea for the campaign germinated during discussions with Knox Thames, Senior Fellow at The Institute for Global Engagement, former U.S. Special Advisor for Religious Minorities at the State Department, when both published articles on the topic “calling for the search and rescue of the Yazidi women and children.”

The #BringBackTheYazidis campaign has support from Free Yezidi Foundation and Nadia’s Initiative, founded by Nadia Murad, who after fleeing her captives became a global voice for her community and sexual violence survivors. As the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize recipient, Murad is a leading advocate for survivors of genocide and sexual violence. Her international court testimonies against ISIS alongside her high-profiled attorney, Amal Clooney, captured world attention.

“Most of the world believes ISIS has been defeated and, with its defeat, a resumption of normalcy in Iraq and Syria. This is not true for the Yazidi community or the thousands of women and children still missing. Nadia’s Initiative continues to advocate for their search and rescue,” says Abid Shamdeen, Executive Director of Nadia’s Initiative, and a Sinjar native.

    “While others may have forgotten, it is impossible for the community to forget those missing. Their absence is an open wound that hasn’t healed.”
Nadia’s Initiative is developing its own programming and working towards the search and rescue of those still missing. But the work requires collective efforts from INGOs, the UN, and member states. In joining the #BringBackTheYazidis campaign as a leading partner, Shamdeen says they garner the support of powerful “global actors and push for the political will to act and create a task force to search for and rescue those still missing.”

To create a global movement, first they must identify where the women and children are located. Working with partners, he says improves coordinated rescue efforts and more importantly attempts to provide a closure for families who need to know if their loved ones “are alive or not, or to bury those who have passed.”

The October 18, U.S. State Department Statement on Missing Yazidi Women and Children joint statement with the Office of International Religious Freedom, advocated for the displaced and missing Yazidis, and continued support for the care of the survivors. The statement was signed by 17 states including U.S., U.K, Albania, Armenia, Australia, Croatia, Denmark, among others.

Mia Bloom, an International Security Fellow at the New America Foundation, and Professor of Communication and Middle East Studies at Georgia State University who studied Yazidi survival in the hands of ISIS says the Yazidi children were “forced into domestic servitude, conscripted into militant activities alongside ISIS child recruits called ‘Cubs of the Caliphate’ and engaged in a “variety of tasks that commensurate with modern day child slavery.” Yazidi boys aged 7-12, were trained as “frontline fighters, suicide bombers, car bombers, or guerrilla fighters, referred to as Inghemasi by ISIS.”

The Yazidi (Female) Survivors Bill, passed this March by Iraqi lawmakers, allows the repatriation of the surviving women victimized by ISIS as victims of Genocide and calls for compensation, rehabilitation, and education for the remaining survivors. But Bloom says it intentionally “avoided any discussion (or mention) of the children born to Yazidi women (forcibly) impregnated by ISIS fighters.”

Virtually every Yazidi girl, ages 9 to 17, was “raped and many suffered from permanent physical damage” with many unable to bear children in the future. This, Bloom says, further proves that “wartime gender-based violence is intended to break the women’s spirit.”

The Yazidi Supreme Council’s decision to reject ISIS offspring born to the Yazidi women because of sexual violence is a point of contention for Bloom who feels the women will be separated from their children and that the “children should not have to pay the price.”

The Plight of the Missing Yazidi Women And Children

The exact number of the Yazidi killed by the ISIS is still unknown. Mass graves continue to be discovered. Nearly 300,000 Yazidi now live in refugee camps.

“We have done various advocacy to shed more light on the Yazidi situation, recognize the nature of the atrocities of Daesh, and ensure justice. With several such efforts, the missing women and children continue to be neglected in any domestic or international actions on the situation,” says Ochab. “We want to ensure that we find them. No negotiation here.”

With the world’s short attention span on various atrocities, the Yazidi story is now forgotten, says Ochab. But for the “women and children still enslaved–it is not over,” she says, hoping that the lesson learned is “to not ignore early warning signs of such atrocity crimes.” But she also admits that since the world has learned nothing over the last seven years, it’s critical to talk about similar atrocities “whether cases of genocide, or where sex slavery is used against women and children.”

“The Yazidis are no strangers to marginalization and oppression. The community has been subjected to dozens of genocides throughout its history. ISIS is the most recent manifestation of targeted ethnic cleansing and systemic subjugation,” says Shamdeen. “Yazidis are peaceful people who want nothing more than the chance to thrive in life.

Their history has forced the community to live in constant survival mode. It is the goal of Nadia’s Initiative to empower Yazidis not just to survive, but to thrive. This is a chance that all peoples across the world deserve. Yet too many are deprived of their basic human rights and resources needed to pursue a better life.”

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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Nov 02, 2021 3:43 am

Religion, History, People and Origin

The Yazidi religion, also spelled as Yezidi, is a monotheistic religion that originated in Northern Iraq. Stems from Sumerian religions with the wording on the famous Yazidi emblem written in ancient Sumerian text/symbols.

While often misunderstood because of its beliefs, the Yazidi shares many similarities with Islam, Christianity, Judaism, and Zoroastrianism because those religions are all based on the Yazidi beliefs


What is Yazidi Religion?

Often considered the oldest first truly monotheistic religion in the world, Yazidis believe in one God named Xwede, who created the world and assigned it to seven holy beings known as Angels or heft sirr (seven mysteries). The seven angels’ leader goes by the name of Tawûsê Melek, and he holds authority over the world.

Yazidis believe in a divine triad. The original and first is the god who is remote and inactive concerning his creation. He only contained and bound it together with his essence. The second hypostasis is Sheikh Adi, and the third is Sultan Ezid. These two are hypostases of the one God. Their identities are sometimes blurred, and the two are often considered manifestations of Tawûsê Melek.

The name ‘Yazidi’ is believed to have been from the old Iranian word ‘yazata,’ which literally meant ‘divine being.’ Other scholars believed it was derived from Umayyad caliph Yazid I, one of their most revered rulers.

There is no recorded history about the first Yazidis. Scholars have theorized that Yazidism origins occurred during Sufi leader Adi ibn Musafir in the 12th century. He founded the community and mixed elements of Islam with the local beliefs. Yazidism became extremely syncretic throughout the years and incorporated other elements of Zoroastrianism, Manichaeism, and Christianity in their beliefs. What Adi ibn Musafir did in point of fact was to alter/reinvent the original, many thousands of years old, sun worshipping religion.

The God Xwede

Xwede created the world and the universe. He also created the seven holy beings to take care of the world. Xwede has more than a thousand other names. Xwede is a benevolent, forgiving, and merciful god, just like how Muslims view their god Allah.

Based on their creation story, he created the world from a white pearl taken from his breast. He then created the first bird called Anfar and put the pearl on the bird’s back. For 40,000 years, the bird broods on the pearl-like it was an egg. After this, God creates angels responsible for the creation of humans, plants, and animals.

Tawûsê Melek

Tawûsê Melek is the leader of the angels. He once disobeyed God by refusing to bow before the first human. This was a test by God to see if his angels were loyal and bowed only to him, their creator. The other angels are called Cibrayîl, Ezrayîl, Mîkayîl, Şifqayîl, Derdayîl, Ezafîl and Ezazîl.

Tawûsê Melek is often worshipped in the form of a peacock. In Christianity, the peacock is a symbol of immortality since its flesh doesn’t appear to decay. Tawuse Melek is also sometimes considered God’s alter ego, which makes him inseparable from him. His other name is Shaytan, often sounding the same as ‘Satan.’ Thus, they labeled Yazidis as devil worshippers. For this reason, Yazidis avoided the word Shaytan when referring to Tawûsê Melek.

Yazidi people are Kurdish-speaking people who were primarily farmers and cattle breeders. They call themselves Ezi, Izid, or Ezid and Dasini or Dasin, which literally meant “the one who created me.” Due to their violent history of persecution, Yazidis have become wary of outsiders. Their community lived an ascetic lifestyle and rarely associated with people from outside their tribe. They have also managed to survive after numerous attempts at extermination.

Many Yazidis physically resemble Muslim Kurds and Armenians, but they deem themselves to be separate from them. They have unique beliefs that their neighbors largely misunderstood, leading them to think they are devil worshippers. Scholars believe they originally come from Northern Iraq and have genetic links to the original Mesopotamian people. They lived in communities in Iraq, Syria, and Turkey and have communities in Georgia and Armenia.

Yazidi population in Iraq live in the Nineveh Governorate. Two of their biggest communities are in the Shekhan District. One is located northeast of Mosul, and another in the Sinjar distinct is close to the Syrian border. For centuries, the mountains of northwestern Iraq have been their home. They’ve built holy places, shrines, and villages in these areas.

In Syria, Yazidis live in two communities. The first one is found in Al-Jazira and the other in Kurd-Dagh. Yazidis in Georgia have a declining population due to economic migration to the West. Current estimates found as little as 6,000 Yazidis in the country. While in Armenia, Yazidis make up the largest ethnic minority group. Most Armenian Yazidis are descendants of refugees who fled to Armenia to escape persecution during the Ottoman rule.

Religious Beliefs

Yazidi religion beliefs revolve around the universal principles of morals and ethics. They are popularly known to be very secretive about their beliefs and traditions. Most of their beliefs are orally passed down from generation to generation. Even the believers don’t have access to their holy book called the Meshef Reh, which was rumored to have been lost. They also prevent outsiders from learning and participating in their holy traditions. Their hymns are even filled with cryptic allusion, so outsiders would have difficulty interpreting it.

Yazidism and Islam share many similarities, but they diverge when it comes to how they perceive God. Yazidi gods are comprised of a holy trinity, just like in the Christian belief. The holy trinity is the only way Yazidis can observe God, and it becomes their object of veneration.

Yazidism also talks about seven archangels that follow God, a theme present in Christianity, Islam, and Judaism. These angels are included in their daily prayers. The angels are believed to reincarnate into human forms occasionally. They also have astronomical values and are often linked to the seven Babylonian planet Gods.

Angels are revered in the Yazidi religion. They are known to come to earth to bring rules for the nations periodically. Sheiks believe they are descended from the blood of the Seven Angels. Another theological difference between Islam and Yazidism is their view of the peacock angel.

In Yazidism beliefs, the peacock angel was God’s earthly representative. His rejection to bow down to humans signified his purest act of devotion to God. In Koran, Muslims view the peacock angel’s refusal to bow to Adam as heretical and equate him to Satan, whom God cast into Hell for disobeying his command.

Because of this parallelism between the peacock angel and Satan, Muslims and Christians accused Yazidis of being devil worshippers. Many historians have defended Yazidism, knowing that the peacock angel is a distinct entity from Satan. The concept of Satan or Hell doesn’t exist in the Yazidi faith.

Yazidis people believe they were created uniquely from the rest of humankind. Unlike other humans that were from Eve, they descended from Adam through his son Shehid bin Jer. This belief made marriage outside their community forbidden. Contact with outsiders is discouraged. If a Yazidi marries someone from outside their faith, they are barred and exiled. Some are even stoned and killed. In 2007, the stoning of a Yazidi girl who allegedly converted to Islam was captured on a cellphone video. This gained worldwide attention and international outcry.

Yazidis believe that humans have both good and evil within them, which exists in their minds and spirit. Humans have the free will to choose which one they follow. They also believe that souls pass into successive bodily forms and go into gradual purification and continual rebirth.

Similar to changing clothes, souls can change until they reach spiritual purification. The worst fate for a Yazidi is to be expelled from his community. This would mean his soul couldn’t progress. Based on the Yazidi calendar, the world is 7,000 years old. This is 5,000 years older than Gregorian Calendar and 1000 years older than the Jewish calendar.

Yazidis perform five Yazidi prayers a day for Tawûsê Melek. Once during dawn, sunrise, noon, afternoon, and sunset. Wednesday is their holy day, and Sunday is a rest day. They also have a strict religious belief system that revolves around purity. They aren’t allowed to eat certain kinds of food such as pork. To wear blue-colored clothing is also taboo. They are also not allowed to pray in the presence of outsiders.

Yazidis are often led by a chief sheik or their supreme religious head and a prince, their secular head. They have three castes that separate their religious duties (not social status): the murids, sheiks, and pirs, who can only marry within their groups, which means it is only possible to be a member of a group by birth. This separation prevents power struggle between castes.

Yazidi culture is patriarchal in nature. Women’s participation in labor, education, and politics is very low. Most women are married at a very young age and become financially dependent on their husbands for the rest of their lives.

During weddings, their priests (pir) break bread into two and give one half to the bride and the other half. Yazidis children are baptized with water by a priest. Yazidis are forced to become monogamous while the chiefs can practice polygamy.

In September, they have an annual pilgrimage to Sheik Adi’s tomb found north of Mosul to perform rituals in the river. This month is a necessary time where many Yazidis come together to celebrate. During the feast, they meet other Yazidis and arrange a few marriages. They are known to sacrifice animals and perform circumcision. Their dead are buried in conical tombs with their hands crossed.

In December, Yazidis fast for three days before drinking wine with the pir. Their holiest shrine is the tomb of their founder Sheikh Adi ibn Musafir. They are also obliged to visit the holy city of Lalish, where the holy temple can be found once during their lifetime. Similar to how Muslims should visit Mecca. To get to Lalish, travelers have to go to Dohuk and take an hour’s drive south-east. Those who come from Erbil will have to drive two and a half hours.

Once inside the temple, Yazidis have to use olive oil candles. They enter the temple’s entrance which is adorned by scarves. While inside, they also kiss the sacred stones of the temple.

Yazidis are predominantly Kurdish and have their language. They also have a rich oral tradition that integrates Islamic beliefs with elements of Zoroastrianism. However, much of their tradition is oral and done in secrecy. This combination of beliefs made Muslims think they were heretics. From 1162 to the 15th century, Yazidism beliefs began to deviate from Islam. Yazidis started drinking alcohol and praying away from Mecca and towards Sheikh Adi’s tomb.

Persecution

Yadizis’ persecution is an important part of their history which has shaped their community. For many Yazidis, the struggle to survive was interlinked with their religious practice. Wrongly labeled as devil-worshippers by many Muslims, Yazidis have faced genocide throughout the years, beginning in the late 16th century.

During the 19th century, Yazidis were persecuted by Ottoman and Kurdish leaders. They were forced to convert to Islam, and those who didn’t were brutally executed. A total of 72 genocidal massacres took place in an attempt to exterminate the Yazidi people.

During Saddam Hussein’s era in 2003, hundreds of Yazidi have been murdered by the terrorist group Al-Qaida. Yazidi women were raped and sold on Arab markets. Because of this, thousands of Yazidis fled to Syria and Turkey.

In 2014, ISIS began terrorizing Yazidi villages. When Islamic militants and extremists captured Sinjar, more than 500,000 Yazidis were in danger. The Iraqi army couldn’t help them, and the people were at the mercy of their captors. This spurred the U.S. to consider a military-led humanitarian action.

Yazidis sought refuge in Kurdish territory while others flee to the mountains and waited for rescue. Those who didn’t flee to the mountains were either taken as prisoners or executed by the extremists. Most of those who went to the Mountain remain trapped for days without food or water. As a result, many died of hunger, injury, or exhaustion.

Of those persecuted, it was the Yazidis women who suffered the most. Extremists enslaved and sexually assaulted 7,000 Yezidi women. Some of them were forced to convert to Islam and married IS fighters. Others who tried to escape were gang-raped.

As the Islamic State continues to take more of Yazidi territory, the Yazidis are forced to either flee or be executed. Isolated, discriminated, and forced to hide, the Yazidis created an insular culture. They became a closed community that rarely intermarry with other Kurds.

Today, Yezidis are one of the many religious minorities in Iraq and there are about 700,000 Yazidis in the world scattered around Iraq, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, and North America. The International Yazidi community is also desperately trying to raise awareness about their beliefs. They believe that they do not deserve persecution and hate because of the global ignorance of their beliefs.

Summary

    Yazidi is the oldest known surviving monotheistic faith in the world. Yazidi faith shares a lot of similarities with Islam, Christianity, Judaism, and Zoroastrianism.

    Yazidis believe in one God who created the world and assigned it to seven angels. The leader of the seven angels is called Tawûsê Melek and he holds authority over the world.

    Yazidis call themselves Ezi, Izid, or Ezid and Dasini or Dasin which literally meant “the one who created me”.

    Yazidis have unique beliefs which are largely misunderstood by their neighbors leading other religious cultures to think they are devil worshippers.

    Most Yazidis come from Northern Iraq and have genetic links to the original Mesopotamian people.

    Wrongly labeled as devil-worshippers by many Muslims, Yazidis have faced genocide throughout the years beginning in the late 16th century.

    During Saddam Hussein’s era in 2003, hundreds of Yazidi have been murdered by the terrorist group Al-Qaida.

    In 2014, ISIS began terrorizing Yazidi villages. When Islamic militants and extremists captured Sinjar, more than 500,000 Yazidis were in danger.

    Yezidis are one of the many religious minorities in Iraq. There are about 700,000 Yazidis in the world scattered around Iraq, Turkey, Armenia, Georgia, and North America.
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Nov 03, 2021 1:37 am

Reparations law progress welcome

New regulations passed by Iraq’s parliament in September on the Yazidi Survivors Law mark long-overdue progress for many who suffered atrocities committed by the Islamic State (ISIS) armed group, Amnesty International said

However, the Iraqi authorities must do more to address the needs of all survivors, including by specifically providing reparations for children who were born as a result of sexual violence by ISIS members during captivity.

The Iraqi authorities also largely ignored the significant recommendations made by Iraqi civil society organizations on the regulations, meaning they lack a survivor-centred approach and fail to establish accountable mechanisms and processes for outreach, applications and review of claims.

    The new regulations to enact the Yazidi Survivors Law are an essential step towards justice for the Yezidi community, and towards ensuring that reparations actually reach survivors
    Nicolette Waldman, Researcher in Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Programme
“The new regulations to enact the Yazidi Survivors Law are an essential step towards justice for the Yezidi community, and towards ensuring that reparations actually reach survivors,” said Nicolette Waldman, Researcher in Amnesty International’s Crisis Response Programme.

“However, children who were born as a result of sexual violence by ISIS members are not specifically referenced in the law, and nor are the needs of their mothers. This is a significant omission which must be addressed to ensure justice for all Yezidi survivors.

“Although some Yezidi women chose to separate from children who were born of sexual violence, many others were forcibly separated – and remain desperate to be reunited.

“The Iraqi authorities must address the plight of these women and children by explicitly including in reparations children born of sexual violence, and taking all necessary actions to ensure these women and children can live together in safety.

“The organizations and civil society actors whose tireless advocacy has helped the law become reality are to be commended. Unfortunately, the Iraqi authorities missed a key opportunity to incorporate their recommendations on the regulations of the law. At Amnesty International, we now call on the Iraqi authorities to heed their calls during the actual implementation of the law.”

Between 2014 and 2017, ISIS committed atrocities against the Yezidi community in Iraq amounting to war crimes and crimes against humanity, and, according to a UN inquiry, genocide.
Background

On 1 March 2021, the Iraqi parliament passed the Yazidi Survivors Law which provides a reparations framework for many survivors of ISIS crimes, including women and girls who were subjected to sexual violence, as well as child survivors who were abducted before the age of 18.

Although the law focuses on the Yezidi community, it also includes in its scope reparations for survivors from the Christian, Turkmen, and Shabak minority groups. The law provides for a monthly salary, a plot of land or housing unit, support to re-enter school, access to psychosocial and other health services, as well as other essential assistance.

In a report released last year, Amnesty International documented how almost 2,000 Yezidi children who have returned to their families after being held captive by ISIS are facing a physical and mental health crisis.

The report, Legacy of Terror: The Plight of Yezidi Child Survivors of ISIS, also addressed the urgent need to end the forced separation of Yezidi women and their children born of sexual violence by ISIS members.

https://www.amnesty.org/en/latest/press ... survivors/
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Nov 04, 2021 12:37 am

UNITAD head discuss trying ISIS

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani received the new head of UNITAD on Wednesday to discuss trying members of the Islamic State (ISIS) and the digitization of the group’s crimes

Christian Ritscher, the new head of the the United Nations Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Daesh (UNITAD), and PM Barzani discussed “the latest legal and technical challenges in trying ISIS criminals, digitally archiving their crimes and relations between courts in Kurdistan Region and Iraq,” according to a statement from Barzani’s office.

Barzani emphasized the “importance of UNITAD backing KRG criminal trials against ISIS terrorists,” added the statement, using the acronym for the Kurdistan Regional Government.

UNITAD also said in a tweet that both sides touched on the operational cooperation in investigations “including archiving & digitizing evidence of ISIS crimes in Iraq.”

The KRG in April proposed setting up a court in Erbil to try ISIS suspects, but that was rejected by Iraq’s Federal Supreme Court in June. Iraq has come under fire for its prosecution of suspected ISIS members. International observers have expressed concern about unfair trials.

ISIS swept through Iraq and neighbouring Syria in 2014, imposing its so-called caliphate rule with extreme violence. Among the group’s crimes are “executions, torture, amputations, ethno-sectarian attacks, rape and sexual slavery imposed on women and girls,” according to UNITAD. Iraq in 2017 asked the UN to help collect and preserve evidence of ISIS crimes.

The UN Security Council in September renewed UNITAD’s mandate to investigate crimes committed by ISIS in Iraq for another year. The KRG welcomed the decision.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/031120211
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Nov 07, 2021 10:48 pm

Yazidis still displaced in their country

Years after the Yazidi massacre by the "Islamic State," tens of thousands of survivors still aren't able to return home. In Iraqi Kurdistan, a German aid worker is trying to help these refugees

A wide gravel road extends into the distance and blurs into the horizon. To the left is a sea of corrugated metal containers and electric poles — beyond that, nothing. This is where the Mam Rashan camp ends.

The refugee camp in the Nineveh district of the autonomous Kurdistan region is like a small town. Over 1,500 Yazidi families live here. Jan Jessen, a German journalist and development aid worker, is a regular visitor to the area in northern Iraq.

Today, he's meeting up with Mezafar Berges Matto, a friendly Yazidi man in his late 30s who seems much older. He and his family were just able to escape "Islamic State" (IS) terrorists and have been living in Mam Rashan since December 2015.

They sit in their living room, a small 10-square-meter area about the size of a car parking space with a walnut-colored PVC floor and an unpleasant blue light filtered through cigarette smoke. As a group of wide-eyed children turn up — some belonging to Berges Matto, some from nearby homes — his wife serves tea and water.

'They wanted to force us to change religion'

When Jessen asks Berges Matto to recount his story, the man clasps his hands together, breathes deeply and nods. Silence falls over the room as he recounts how his family were living in a village in Sinjar when ISIS militants turned up.

"They came and captured us. They wanted to force us to change religion," he explains, saying it was a miracle that he and his family were able to escape into the mountains.

They were lucky. According to the US-based NGO Yazda, some 12,000 people were kidnapped or killed in the first week of what the UN has characterized as the Yazidi genocide in August 2014.

Thousands were forced to flee, and many died as a result. ISIS fighters killed older people, along with those who were too weak to flee and those who refused to convert to Islam. They kidnapped and indoctrinated children. Boys were trained to become ISIS fighters, and women and girls were sold into sexual slavery. Thousands of Yazidis are still missing. Many mass graves have been found, but not all of them have been exhumed.

At the camp, children try to keep themselves distracted with soccer and other activities

But the "Islamic State" was driven out in 2017, so why have some 300,000 displaced Yazidis still not been able to go home? To find out, DW traveled west to Sinjar, a predominantly Yazidi region before the ISIS invasion.

The landscape changes drastically as the SUV arrives in the section controlled by Baghdad. Barbed wire, watchtowers and machine guns line the road, which runs through a barren landscape of empty houses, bombed-out cars and mountains of rubble and plastic waste. It feels like another country.

Checkpoints appear every 200 meters (219 yards) or so — and the car is stopped at every other one. Sometimes that means waiting for hours. Jessen gets out of the car to smoke a cigarette, calm despite the presence of soldiers armed with US-made M16 assault rifles and Russian-made Kalashnikovs. Hand grenades and other ammunition hang out of their vest pockets, which are decorated with skulls.

Eventually, the soldiers let the car pass, the decision to stop travelers seemingly made at random.

Various factions are operating in the volatile region of northern Iraq. Sinjar's volatile security situation keeps many away

"There are different problems in different regions," explains Thomas Schmidinger, a political scientist and cultural anthropologist who conducts research on ethnic and religious minorities in the Middle East.

The situation is particularly tense in Sinjar, which is crowded with various militias belonging to different factions: the People's Protection Units (YPG), which is affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK), recognized by the US and the EU as a terrorist organization; the Popular Mobilization Forces, supported in part by Iran; the peshmerga, the Kurdish branch of the Iraqi forces; and numerous other representatives of the Iraqi army. At the same time, Turkey regularly bombs the area, which is home to Kurdish insurgent groups who have demanded separation from Turkey.

The volatile security situation is the main reason not all Yazidis want to come back. And for many survivors, it's simply unthinkable to come back to a place inhabited by their tormentors. "Quite a few supporters and even active ISIS fighters [were] living in the Arab villages and towns near the Yazidi settlements, and some of them still live there," says Schmidinger.

Perwin Ali Baku escaped the Islamic State after more than two years in captivity. The 23-year-old Yazidi woman was captured together with her 3-year-old daughter. "I don't feel right," she says, sitting on a mattress on the floor of her father-in-law's small hut in a northern Iraq refugee camp. "I still can't sleep and my body is tense all the time."

Projects to help people 'start anew'

But a few families have returned to the town of Sinun to the north of Sinjar — which, according to Schmidinger, is somewhat safer. Caritas-Flüchtlingshilfe Essen, the refugee NGO for which Jessen works, set up a greenhouse project here last year.

"We are trying to set up projects to make it easier for people to start anew if they come back," he explains, blinking into the afternoon sun with the Sinjar Mountains behind him. Nearby, hoses distribute water among the greenhouses, where mostly cucumbers and herbs grow under white tarpaulin.

"The people coming back do not have jobs. The infrastructure is broken, and the security situation is difficult. But most of all they do not have jobs," said Jessen.

The greenhouse project is to show the returning Yazidis that it's possible to make money growing plants. A family can earn as much as $150 (€130) with one greenhouse — and they can eat their own produce as well.

Children at the Mam Rashan camp

Thousands of Yazidi children are looking for a brighter future, 'I just want to survive'

But what's really necessary is a political solution to the conflict, says Schmidinger. "All the local actors have to agree. Otherwise, there will not be a peaceful solution for Sinjar."

Mezafar Berges Matto and his family plan to stay in Mam Rashan until the political situation back home is clearer. They feel safe here, even if they don't have much space.

Ajad, who is 10, is dressed like children everywhere, in an FC Barcelona tracksuit and sporting a digital watch. But he has a very specific dream: "I just want to survive," he says with a shy smile.

Link to Article - Photos:

https://www.dw.com/en/yazidis-still-dis ... a-59725928
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