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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 » Sun Jan 01, 2017 4:47 pm

Several Yezidi girls escape ISIS captivity in Mosul

At least four Yezidi girls were able to escape Islamic State’s (ISIS) captivity in the city of Mosul in Iraq’s northwestern Nineveh Governorate. :ymhug:

Informed sources told ARA News that three of the Yezidi captives were freed with the support of the Arab al-Luhaib tribe in Mosul, while the fourth was able to flee on her own and reached Peshmerga-controlled areas northeast of Mosul.

Falah Hassan Zaidan, the Iraqi Minister of Agriculture, confirmed in a press statement that members of a-Luhaib tribe helped three Yezidi girls to escape ISIS captivity in the city of Mosul.

A Peshmerga officer, meanwhile, reported that a Yezidi woman arrived in the Kurdish-held northeastern Mosul after fleeing the embattled city.

“The Kurdistan Regional Government bears the responsibility of freeing hundreds of Yezidi captives from ISIS grip,” Kurdish journalist Hewar Duhoki told ARA News. “This requires a lot of serious efforts, especially that ISIS started using civilians as human shields to protect its Iraqi de facto capital of Mosul.”

In August 2014, ISIS radicals took over the Yezidi region of Shingal/Sinjar in northern Iraq, causing a mass displacement of nearly 400,000 people to Duhok and Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan. Tens of thousands of Yezidis remained trapped in Mount Sinjar, suffering mass killings, kidnappings and rape cases, according to local and military sources. Also, more than 3000 Yezidi girls have been taken by the radical group as sex slaves.

On November 13, the Kurdish Peshmerga forces in Iraqi Kurdistan, backed by an air cover from the US-led coalition forces, announced the liberation of the entire Yezidi district of Shingal in the northern Iraqi province of Nineveh after fierce battles with ISIS extremists.

The Kurdish forces have recently discovered more than five mass graves in the Yezidi region, where hundreds of Yezidi civilians have been summarily executed and buried by ISIS jihadis. Yet, thousands of Yezidi women remain in ISIS captivity after being sold as sex slaves across the group’s territory in Iraq and Syria.

What, one might wonder, has the world done to free the Yazidis from captivity!

NOTHING
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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 » Sun Jan 01, 2017 4:56 pm

Below is a list of what all other countries have done to free Yazidis:

Albanian asgjë
Basque nothing
Belarusian нічога
Bosnian ništa
Bulgarian Нищо
Catalan res
Croatian ništa
Czech nic
Danish intet
Dutch niets
Estonian mitte midagi
Finnish ei mitään
French rien
Galician nada
German gar nichts
Greek τίποτα
Hungarian semmi
Icelandic ekkert
Irish rud ar bith
Italian niente
Latvian nekas
Lithuanian niekas
Macedonian ништо
Maltese xejn
Norwegian ingenting
Polish nic
Portuguese nenhuma coisa
Romanian nimic
Russian ничего
Serbian ništa
Slovak nič
Slovenian nič
Spanish nada
Swedish ingenting
Ukrainian нічого
Welsh dim byd
Yiddish גאָרנישט

Saying Nothing in Asian Languages

Armenian ոչինչ
Azerbaijani heç bir şey
Bengali কিছু না
Chinese Simplified 没什么
Chinese Traditional 沒什麼
Georgian არაფერი
Gujarati કંઇ
Hindi कुछ नहीं
Hmong tsis muaj dab tsi
Japanese 何も
Kannada ಏನೂ
Kazakh ештеңе
Khmer គ្មាន​អ្វី
Korean 아무것도
Lao ບໍ່​ມີ​ຫຍັງ
Malayalam ഒന്നും
Marathi काही
Mongolian юу ч биш
Myanmar (Burmese) ဘာမျှမ
Nepali केही
Sinhala කිසිවක්
Tajik чизе
Tamil எதுவும்
Telugu ఏమీ
Thai ไม่มีอะไร
Urdu کچھ بھی نہیں
Uzbek hech nima
Vietnamese không gì hết

Saying Nothing in Middle-Eastern Languages

Arabic لا شى
Hebrew לא כלום
Persian هیچ چی
Turkish hiçbir şey

Saying Nothing in African Languages

Afrikaans niks
Chichewa kanthu
Hausa kome ba
Igbo ihe ọ bụla
Sesotho ha ho letho le
Somali waxba
Swahili kitu
Yoruba ohunkohun
Zulu lutho

Saying Nothing in Austronesian Languages

Cebuano walay bisan unsa nga
Filipino wala
Indonesian tidak ada
Javanese boten
Malagasy na inona na inona
Malay apa-apa
Maori kahore

Saying Nothing in Other Foreign Languages

Esperanto nenio
Haitian Creole pa gen anyen
Latin nihil
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Jan 03, 2017 3:48 pm

Êzidî Party issues a call to migrated Êzidîs and the UNHCR

Êzidî Freedom and Democracy Party (PADÊ) issued a written statement and called on the UNHCR (United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees) to fulfill their duties.

The statement stated that they will do everything in their power for the return of Êzidîs and called on the Êzidîs forced to leave their lands to return.

The PADÊ statement is as follows:

“War, murder and pillaging are the most savage practice created by humankind. Displacing people, exiling them into the unknown and subjecting them to all kinds of inhumane practices are all created by people. None of these have any place in nature and natural life. But starting in the 20th century, up to today, immigration and asylum seeking are daily occurrences. Especially in the Middle East, millions of people have been uprooted and we have reached such a point that the European countries are now failing to bear these loads. We must resolve this issue, together and at once.

We Êzidîs lived through another firman on August 3, 2014 and hundreds of thousands of our people became refugees as a result. Families had to leave their lands, their villages and their homes and drift into the unknown. Since that day, the migration issue continues and can’t be resolved. Because those hundreds of thousands of our people haven’t been able to return to their lands yet. :((

Especially the Turkish state, but also many other states, are following immoral policies in trying to reap advantage from the bad situation the refugees. When looked closely, it can be seen that the forces that started the war, forced the locals to migrate and tricked the displaced people are one and the same. These forces have been convicted in the conscience of humanity. Unfortunately, on top of all these, the Turkish state has very openly used the refugees as a bargaining chip. He sells them, plays games over them and tries to recruit terrorists from among them. All these will not be accepted in the conscience of humanity.

In 2014, more than 30.000 Êzidî migrants crossed over to Turkey. This number was provided by the UNHCR and this is the number for the aid that was received but not handed over to them unfortunately because they are Êzidîs. In addition, the Êzidîs were not granted refugee rights. It was Kurdish municipalities and non-governmental organizations to embrace the Êzidîs. However, this support has also been cut off now since Kurdish institutions and municipalities were closed and seized.

During this recent process, efforts are being made to evacuate the Êzidîs in the Fidanlık Camp in Amed. This practice of the Turkish state will not be accepted for these aim to draw our Êzidî people away from their reality and faith, and to make them an instrument and use. Our people staying in the Fidanlık Camp should not give opportunity to these policies of the Turkish state and return to their lands immediately. The Turkish state is known to be hostile to Êzidîs and Zoroastrians. Our people in this camp should therefore avoid surrendering to the Turkish state and they should turn their faces towards their own lands.

Regarding this issue, we call on international institutions to fulfill their responsibilities and missions. The United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees should provide our people with practical opportunities in order for the return of our people for this is a moral and conscientious duty of theirs.

Also, we as PADÊ express that we will do everything in our power in order for the displaced Êzidîs to return and settle in their own lands by re-building their houses and villages. Our people should turn back to their lands because this is the only way a free and dignified life can be attained." :ymapplause:
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jan 07, 2017 2:51 am

Children of the Sun: Kurdish Yezidis, (2009) Part 1/2

According to ancient legend, in the beginning God created a white pearl and a bird. He then created seven angels including Melek Taus, the peacock angel whom he made the greatest of them all.

To make land, He threw Lalish into the water which made it solid. And so the seven Angels went ashore at Lalish. These people, the Yezidis, believe that they were the very first inhabitants on earth when the world was created.

Yezidism is one of the most unusual and unknown religions on earth. It has survived during the centuries despite its status as an unrecognized religion under Islamic rule, and through many onslaughts against its Kurdish followers.


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Children of the Sun: Kurdish Yezidis, (2009) Part 2/2

phpBB [video]
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jan 12, 2017 12:33 am

150 Yezidis freed from ISIS captivity since launch of Mosul campaign

At least 150 Yezidi captives have been freed from ISIS grip since the US-backed Iraqi and Kurdish forces launched a battle for Mosul last October, officials said on Wednesday.

The Yezidi Liberation Office confirmed that 150 women and children have been liberated from ISIS captivity in Mosul over the past three months.

“All Yezidi civilians freed from ISIS are being registered by the office. We are also documenting their testimonies,” said Hussein Koro, chief of the Yezidi Liberation Office.

According to the organization, there are still more than 2600 Yezidis held by ISIS, mostly women and underage girls.

“There is a plan to liberate the rest of the captives. Soon they’ll all be freed with the support of the coalition and local forces,” Koro said.

According to the Kurdish journalist Hewar Duhoki, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) bears the responsibility of freeing the Yezidi captives from ISIS grip. “This requires a lot of serious efforts, especially that ISIS started using civilians as human shields to protect its Iraqi de facto capital of Mosul,” Duhoki told ARA News.

In August 2014, ISIS radicals took over the Yezidi region of Shingal/Sinjar in northern Iraq, causing a mass displacement of nearly 400,000 people to Duhok and Erbil in Iraqi Kurdistan. Tens of thousands of Yezidis remained trapped in Mount Sinjar, suffering mass killings, kidnappings and rape cases, according to local and military sources. Also, thousands of Yezidi girls have been taken by the radical group as sex slaves.

On November 13, the Kurdish Peshmerga forces in Iraqi Kurdistan, backed by an air cover from the US-led coalition forces, announced the liberation of the entire Yezidi district of Shingal in the northern Iraqi province of Nineveh after fierce battles with ISIS extremists.

The Kurdish forces have recently discovered more than five mass graves in the Yezidi region, where hundreds of Yezidi civilians have been summarily executed and buried by ISIS jihadis. Yet, thousands of Yezidi women remain in ISIS captivity after being sold as sex slaves across the group’s territory in Iraq and Syria.

http://aranews.net/2017/01/150-yezidis- ... -official/
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Jan 12, 2017 3:37 pm

UN Handed Over 124 Units of Residential Houses to Returnees in Sinjar

Following the ISIS attack on Mosul, over 275,000 people from Mount Sinjar area - including a vast majority of Yazidis - were driven out of their homes. Abandoned Yazidi settlements were either systematically demolished or seized by ISIS fighters.

Some 3,000 homes are thought to have been destroyed or burned down in the sub-district of Sinuni alone.

As part of the United Nations Human Settlements Programme (UN-Habitat)’s Urban Recovery Programme, in partnership with the Ninewah Governor’s Office, UN-Habitat rehabilitated 124 houses in Harden town for returnees representing the first phase of housing rehabilitation in Sinuni.

The project was supported by the United Nations Development Programme (UNDP)’s Iraq Crisis Response and Resilience Programme (ICRRP) with generous funding from German Development Bank KfW.

The project promotes sustainable and resilient towns for returnees beneficiaries and rightful occupants through the rehabilitation of housing and infrastructure. The community-led approach builds self-reliance of local communities and authorities; can ensure security, protection, and rights; generate a process that would allow families in need to build a basic secure home; cultivate a spirit of peace building and community cohesiveness; and secure recovery investments that remain with the community.

In the ceremony, Ms. Yuko Otsuki, Deputy Head of UN-Habitat Iraq Programme underlined the strategic importance of this intervention to facilitate return, not only by the physical rehabilitation of damaged houses and infrastructure but also by addressing tenure rights of the returning families. She also expressed sincere appreciation for the partnership and engagement with the local authorities in Sinuni, and she confirmed UN-Habitat’s commitment to continue to work on urban recovery in the area.

On behalf of the people of Sinuni, the Mayor Mr. Nayeef Saydoo Qasem expressed his gratitude for the support and for the establishment of the UN-Habitat field office in Sinuni, particularly in an area suffering from underdevelopment, reiterating that “housing is critical to support the return of the displaced to Sinuni”. The restitution of housing rights for project beneficiaries was highlighted as a key component of the project that was facilitating returns.

Ms. Mizuho Yokoi, Programme Manager of UNDP ICRRP, acknowledged the effective partnership with the local authority in Sinuni and emphasised on the importance of this multi-dimensional intervention to enhance resilience of the local communities in Sinjar Mountain.

In Hardan village (45 KM to the west of Sinuni) where the 124 families returned to the rehabilitated houses, the village Mokhtar and community leader, Mr. Abu Nizar confirmed that “by rehabilitation of the houses and the only clinic in this remote village the project brought life back”.

http://www.pukmedia.com/EN/EN_Direje.aspx?Jimare=39443

3,000 homes destroyed 124 units provided

GEE THANKS X( X( X( X( X(
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Jan 13, 2017 11:41 am

Iraq's Yazidi community clings to homeland amid genocide

Members of one of the world’s most persecuted religious groups, the Yazidis of northern Iraq, are struggling over whether to leave their ancestral homeland or rebuild their diminished and traumatized community outside the Middle East.

Some Yazidi leaders oppose migration and are seeking foreign help to re-establish their community in Iraq’s Sinjar region. Other Yazidi leaders support migration, and various western governments are welcoming them as refugees.

Yazidi religious leaders are among those opposed to resettlement, fearing that being scattered will mean the end of their identity. Baba Chawish, the head of the Yazidi’s Spiritual Council and guardian of their holiest site, Lalish, told FoxNews.com that they desperately need protection and help, emphasizing that most Yazidis want to be able to sleep in their own houses and own beds and that if they have to leave Yazidis will “vanish.”

That’s a view held by many lay people in the Yazidi community.

“Yazidis are a small religious minority. They have lost people in genocidal campaigns and vast areas of land in the past two hundred years,” one Yazidi person in Iraq, who requested anonymity, told FoxNews.com. “Immigration is another major threat to the future of this religion and ancient culture.”

In addition, the head of Iraq’s Kurdish Regional Government, Nechervan Idris Barzani, recently released a statement opposing plans for thousands of Yazidis to be permanently resettled in Canada, emphasizing that he is opposed to any “organized attempt to mass migrate members of its community.”

Yazidi leaders who want their community to stay in Iraq’s Sinjar region, where they have lived for centuries, agree that members are free to leave. But they plead with western governments to fund and assist them in rebuilding their villages rather than welcoming Yazidis as refugees.

“Migration will have a negative impact on the Yazidi religion in Iraq and Kurdistan. We encourage Yazidis to remain,” said Qewel Bahzad, a member of the Yazidi Spiritual Council.

The migration controversy deepened on Monday after the KRG’s security services closed the offices of Yazda, a Yazidi advocacy group, in the Iraq-Kurdistan region, accusing the organization of failing to abide by the terms and conditions for NGOs in the region.” An official source told FoxNews.com that there have been grave concerns over Yazda’s encouraging migration. Yazda confirmed on social media that those offices were closed but stated that the closure was for “unknown reasons.”

Beyond concerns over the dangers of migration are worries that, longer term, Iran will benefit from any Yazidi exodus out of Iraq. Sinjar is contested land between the Baghdad Central Government and the Kurdish Regional Government, although it is currently under control of the Kurdish Peshmerga. Some officials in the region have also expressed worry that Iran, which has significant influence in Baghdad and is known to garner support with various minorities in Iraq through financial incentives to boost its foothold – has its eyes set on the traditionally Yazidi homeland close to the Syrian border.

If secured, a reported long-held Iranian goal, the land bridge would enable Iran and its proxies clear passage for supplies and oil between the Mediterranean and Tehran and guarantee a crescent of influence.

“The fewer people in the way,” one Iraq-based source added, “the less resistance and the less trouble.”

On the other side of the debate is Yazda and its best-known representative, Nadia Murad, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and the UN’s first Goodwill Ambassador for the Dignity of Survivors of Human Trafficking. The 22-year-old, who is represented by British lawyer Amal Clooney, catapulted onto the international stage in December 2015 when she documented for the UN Security Council how jihadists assaulted her village in early August 2014 and her subsequent time in captivity as a sex slave.

Nadia has traveled the world advocating for safe passage and visas for Yazidis. She urges numerous western governments to resettle as many Yazidi refugees as possible, stressing that they are victims and “have the right to seek a safe country that safeguards (their) dignity.”

Murad Ismael, Yazda’s executive director, said the international community needs to grasp how chronic and acute Yazidi suffering has been.

“Genocide was committed against the Yazidis. They were not protected by the state,” he said. “Yazidis should be allowed to relocate if they choose to be relocated.

Meanwhile, western governments are already responding to appeals like Nadia’s.

Canada’s House of Commons voted unanimously in late October to begin resettling Yazidis. Sonia Lesage, spokesperson for Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship in the Canadian government told FoxNews.com that they are “committed to offering protection to the Yazidi population at risk,” and that individuals who are accepted for resettlement will have full permanent resident status upon arrival.

Canadian MP Michelle Rempel echoed such a sentiment, saying that while Canada has resettled over 25,000 refugees, mostly Syrian, almost no persecuted ethnic and religious minorities have been referred, something which “needs to change.”

Scottish members of parliament are now urging their government to follow suit, and Murad is also encouraging the U.K and Australia to open its doors permanently to Yazidis.

The United States, too, is putting plans in place to resettle Yazidis. According to Danna Van Brandt, public diplomacy and public affairs advisor in the U.S State Department, the U.S Refugee Admissions Program, actively resettles Yazidis and has many cases in process. The first tranche of cases is due to be submitted in early 2017.

http://www.foxnews.com/world/2017/01/12 ... ocide.html
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Jan 13, 2017 12:03 pm

F***K Yazda X(

I do not know why they have closed down only glad that they have :ymapplause:

There are so few Yazidis that separating them and resettling them in different countries is the last thing that should be done - it would totally destroy what little remains of their culture and heritage

YAZIDIS THE BRAVEST OF ALL KURDS

Yazidis, the wonderful people who refused time after time to except the barbaric Muslim beliefs even on pain of death

Yazidis deserve RESPECT and WORLDWIDE support :ymapplause:

Forget Mosul - the slaughter taking place there should NOT be happening - it is an unforgivable slaughter and a senseless destruction of property and businesses

The coalition should rescue the Yazidi women and children from their continuing lives of torture and rape - the international community should secure the Yazidi lands and rebuild their homes :ymhug:

I am TOTALLY AGAINST anything that divides and destroys the Yazidi community X(
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Jan 13, 2017 7:05 pm

Kurdish Yazidi activist Nadia Murad visits Barcelona FC

Kurdish Yazidi activist and survivor of enslavement by the Islamic State group Nadia Murad, who became a global icon in the defense of human rights, was invited by the Barcelona Football Club Foundation to visit the Spanish city of Barcelona and meet the famous team on Thursday.

Murad was welcomed by the president of the football club Josep Maria Bartomeu and Jordi Cardoner, Vice President of the club. Together they discussed the future plans of the football team to engage in further projects involving gender equality, a local news agency reported.

The team already works on using sports as as a key for reducing violence and aggressive behaviour among children and young people around the world.

On Thursday Murad also visited a training session of the women’s football team. After the session she spent time with the athletes discussing the importance of gender equality, women’s rights and football as a tool of promoting peace and harmony. In addition she met with Lionel Messi and Luiz Suarez.

“It was a great honor to be with Barcelona FC. Sports is a way to counter terrorism through giving the youth a meaningful and happy life,” Murad said on her social platform.

Since her escape from the Islamic Jihadi extremist group, Murad became a Human Rights activist, a Nobel Peace Prize nominee and since September 2016 the first Goodwill Ambassador for the Dignity of Survivors of Human Trafficking of the United Nations.

Islamic State group has captured most parts of the Yazidi Sinjar district in northwest Iraq on August 3, 2014 which led thousands of Kurdish families to flee to Mount Sinjar, where they were trapped in it and suffered from significant lack of water and food, killing and abduction of thousands of Yazidis as well as rape and captivity of thousands of women.

Those who stay behind are subjected to brutal, genocidal acts: thousands killed, hundreds buried alive, and countless acts of rape, kidnapping and enslavement are perpetuated against Yazidi women. To add insult to injury, IS fighters ransack and destroy ancient Yazidi holy sites.

According to Human Rights organizations, thousands of Yazidi women and girls have been forced to marry or been sold into sexual slavery by the IS jihadists.

A Yazidi member of Iraqi parliament Vian Dakhil, said in August 2016, that 3,770 Kurdish Yazidi women and children still in Islamic State captivity.


http://ekurd.net/yazidi-nadia-visits-ba ... 2017-01-13

Nadia Murad does a brilliant job in the hands of her famous solicitor, Amal Clooney.

However, I want many of the other girls to be given the same opportunities to share their views and experiences :D

I view the use of Nadia Murad as nothing short of

TOKENISM
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jan 15, 2017 7:41 pm

Shengal Constituent Assembly released the following statement

"Today is the second anniversary of the establishment of our Assembly that the Êzidî people on Mount Shengal built through sacred resistance.

Our Êzidî people were subjected to a firman (an ordinance or decree issued by the sovereign) and massacre, huge repression and atrocity.

The forces deployed in Shengal, who were talking about stability and peace in Shengal and protection of the Êzidî people, gave no response and mounted no single resistance even to the enemy when savage gangs launched an aggression and the war came to our door.

And consequently, hundreds of thousands of civilians and families were faced with the enemy, thousands of mothers and children ended in captivity and massacre at the hands of ISIS gangs.

Because of the loss of hope and confidence among Shengal people in these mentioned forces, emergence of an administrative vacuum and lack of people to lead Shengalis, Êzidî people decided to establish an assembly to represent and lead the Êzidîs.

Members of this assembly were elected democratically, which was followed by the establishment of our military forces YBŞ and YJŞ [Shengal - Women's Resistance Units], the fighters of which got themselves written in the pages of history with golden letters with their sacred resistance and relentless struggle. Hundreds of gang members that perpetrated a genocide against our people were murdered by these young brave girls and boys of Êzidxan.

Works and preparations continue for the autonomy of Shengal, a demand of all our people who now want to govern themselves and to be autonomous. The Article 125 of the Iraqi Constitution grants every minority in Iraq the right to declare autonomy. As Êzidî people, we demand the Iraqi government does what is necessary with regard to this article, and manifests their stand in this regard. In order to ensure the recognition of the tragedy suffered by our people and to overcome all these difficulties, the legitimate rights of our people must be secured and they must lead a free life like all the other peoples in Iraq.

Additionally, we urge the United Nations, all human rights organisations and institutions and all those working to protect minority rights to follow and support our cause. We also demand the recognition of the firman suffered by our people as genocide. International forces should take all the lands housing Êzidîs under protection, form an international committee to investigate and explain the causes of the firman. All those responsible for and involved in this firman must be brought to justice and sentenced at courts."
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Jan 20, 2017 12:58 pm

The heartbreaking story of one Yazidi child, telling how he was treated in Turkey and how his family has been divided

phpBB [video]


To divide the Yazidis is GENOCIDE

After all they have been through, these sad and badly treated people should be treated with much more compassion

Yazidis have lost family members, friends, homes, business and community support

NOW they are losing the remaining ties they have with extended families and others of their community as they are sent to the 4 corners of the world X(

World priorities should be:

1) rescue the Yazidi women and children who remain prisoners of the Islamic State and as such are subject to a daily onslaught of rape and torture

2) secure and rebuild the Yazidi's homes and villages allowing them to rebuild their lives

DO NOT DIVIDE AND DESTROY THE YAZIDI COMMUNITY
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Jan 24, 2017 7:48 pm

Amal Clooney: Defending the poor in clothes expensive enough to rebuild an entire Yazidi village!

What a difference just three years has made to the career of human rights barrister Amal Alamuddin.

Before she met George Clooney she was a pretty and clever lawyer largely unknown outside legal circles.

Then in 2014 she married her Hollywood star in a four-day, £3.5 million Venice extravaganza, showing off more costume changes than a catwalk model, with pictures plastered all over the globe.

Now we are suddenly supposed to regard her as one of the most influential women in the world.

Amal Clooney, as she styles herself (so much for feminism!), was a guest this week at a Women of Impact dinner in Davos, hosted by the publisher and New York-based media luvvie Tina Brown.

Mrs Clooney, who appeared with George, was honoured at the dinner for her human rights work.

Personally, I would have thought that was what she’s paid to do — although, to be fair, she does carry out some pro bono work for which she waives her usual £500-an-hour fee.

Also honoured at the dinner was Amal’s Nobel Peace Prize-nominated client Nadia Murad, now a U.N. goodwill ambassador.

Nadia has been courageously outspoken about the persecution of the Yazidi people from northern Iraq.

She was imprisoned by ISIS after the terror group executed her mother and brothers and is a worthy recipient of any honour.

Yet competent though Amal might be and important as her work is, why on earth is she being feted in this way simply for doing her job?

You can be sure it wouldn’t have happened had she not married Clooney.

At the event in Davos, Amal was wearing a £9,875 Chanel dress, enough to rebuild an entire Yazidi village (in the photo below from Instagram).

Image

But that’s small fry compared with the £34,000 of couture outfits she wore in just two weeks last September while working as a human rights lawyer fighting trafficking, ISIS, sex slavery and weighing in on the refugee crisis.

I’m sure she spends as much time on her legal briefs as she does on planning her wardrobe (although if the rumour she is pregnant with twins is true, Amal will soon be forking out for very expensive maternity wear).

What really sticks in one’s craw is seeing a highly privileged lawyer honoured in this way on the back of her multi-millionaire husband while so many other great women can’t get a look-in because they don’t swan about like Amal in celebrity circles.

http://www.albawaba.com/entertainment/a ... illage-928

Sounds like jealousy :)) =))

I have no problem with a well trained, hard working lawyer enjoying the benifits of her hard work. As the article reminds us: she does carry out some pro bono work for which she waives her usual £500-an-hour fee :ymapplause:

As for George Clooney - it is unusual to see a well-known actor marry someone with a brain - good luck to them both :ymhug:

Yes they spend their money on themselves - most people do - lawyers have to remain emotionally detached and cannot be expected to give their hard-earned money to their clients 8-}

As far as I can see - Amal Clooney has gained a great deal of support for the Yazidi cause :ymapplause:
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Jan 28, 2017 1:06 am

The Yazidi sisters who took up arms to take revenge against ISIS

Khatoon Khider used to sing old folk songs about the suffering of her people, the Yazidi religious minority. But recently, when she found herself in a crisis worthy of those songs, she couldn’t bring herself to play any more.

ISIS overran her hometown of Sinjar, in northern Iraq, in the summer of 2014. They killed an estimated 5,000 men and boys and took thousands of women and girls captive to be bought and sold as sex slaves. The United Nations called it a genocide.

“I was famous in many places. But I left all of that after what happened and I became a soldier.”

Khatoon was there when ISIS came to Sinjar, during the group’s brutal rapid takeover of areas of northern and western Iraq. Kurdish peshmerga fighters stationed in the town retreated. She watched it all unfold in front of her.

“They took women, children and girls, they took families and carried out massacres,” says Khatoon, 36, as we meet at her temporary home in the city of Dohuk.

She fled with her neighbors up Mount Sinjar, and ISIS fighters chased after them. In hiding the Yazidis had no food or water. Many feared they would starve to death.

“I was stuck in the mountain for 10 days, I saw with my bare eyes that women threw away their children so that ISIS wouldn’t capture them. People were leaving their parents, the older men and women, and fleeing.”

It was the ISIS attack on Yazidis that prompted the first US intervention against the group. In August 2014, as thousands of Yazidi people found themselves stranded and starving atop Mount Sinjar — a sacred place to adherents of the faith — then President Barack Obama ordered airstrikes against the militants and airlifts for those trapped.

After her lucky escape, Khatoon wanted to fight back. This was a crime against humanity, but it was also a crime against women. She thought women should play a role in fighting back. She refused to be a victim.

Her solution was to form the first all-female Yazidi fighting battalion. They call themselves the Sun Ladies.

The battalion received weapons, training and support from the government of semi-autonomous Kurdistan region in northern Iraq. They are the first female battalion of the peshmerga — the Kurdish region’s army — which translates to “those who face death.”

Khatoon says she has 1,700 Yazidi women in her battalion. They found willing volunteers among those displaced from Sinjar, many of whom had friends and relatives captured and enslaved by ISIS.

“I asked the Yazidi girls, ‘Who would like to join me to defend our honor?’ And every day in displaced camps for Yazidi people, girls were signing up,” she says. “We spread through media that we are going to defend our honor and my call is not only for Yazidi girls, not for Sinjar alone, but to all women.”

One of those who signed up was her younger sister, Aliya.

Sitting beside Khatoon as we talk, Aliya is 21-years-old and has a very stern expression. Khatoon has the soft eyes of a singer, but Aliya’s are different somehow.

“I knew many girls who were taken by ISIS. Many of my school friends,” Aliya says. “Some of them are still captured by ISIS. If they knew about weapons, they might have escaped from ISIS.”

The sisters come from a military family. Their brother is also in the peshmerga. Their father was a soldier, and so was his father. Before ISIS came along, Khatoon had chosen another path. But Aliya always wanted to be a fighter.

“Everyone had different dreams of what they wanted to become in the future. I was dreaming about going to the army college and becoming a peshmerga,” Aliya says. “I was proud of my brother, watching him wear his uniform and going to duty.”

Accurate numbers for the Yazidi population are hard to come by, but estimates range from 200,000 to 700,000. They are based primarily in northern Iraq, but some have spread to neighboring Turkey and Syria.

The Yazidi faith shares some aspects of Christianity and Islam, but it is a distinct religion. Followers worship one supreme being, a peacock angel named Malak Taus. Their faith is based on oral tradition — they don’t have a holy book, Khatoon explains.

They have long been viewed with suspicion by religious extremists. ISIS called them “devil worshippers” when they carried out their attacks.

As Khatoon tells it, Yazidis have lived in a siege mentality for as long as they can remember.

“The situation of Yazidis here in Sinjar has never been good. We have never seen a good life,” she says.

“Me, my father and my grandfather have all seen wars. They say there have been 73 massacres on Yazidi people. Every time there is a fight a government comes here, because Sinjar is a strategic place, it is between Iraq and Syria, and there are all religions in Sinjar.”

She also talks of a tension between Yazidis and their Arab neighbors.

“If we go to live with Arabs they don’t accept us building houses near them. They didn’t accept us to have even a handful of land. We worked on people’s farms for 13 years.”

Part of the reason Khatoon started her battalion appears to be not just for revenge, but also to stop anything like the ISIS takeover from ever happening again.

After several requests, Khatoon agrees to sing one of the songs she used to sing. It’s an old Yazidi folk song.

In it, the singer is addressing a bird. She tells it not to make its nest in that tree. That tree is a dangerous place. It can be destroyed at any time. Trust nobody.

She is singing, of course, about the Yazidis and their home in Sinjar.

In a few days, the sisters will return to their posts back in Sinjar. They are consumed with the drive to fight the men who committed such heinous acts against their people.

ISIS is on the run in Iraq. This month Iraqi army said they recaptured all of the eastern part of the city of Mosul. When the militant group is defeated there, it will have lost its last major stronghold in the country.

But the ideology of ISIS will always be a threat to the Yazidis. There may come a time when the extremists try to rise up again, and finish what they started.

The next time they do, Khatoon and Aliya will be waiting for them, in their nest, in that dangerous tree.

Link to Article - Photo - Video

http://www.msn.com/en-gb/news/world/the ... ar-AAmjHz1
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jan 29, 2017 12:14 am

Routed by ISIS, Yazidis Hope to Build ‘New Sinjar’

Iraqi Yazidis have prepared a master plan to construct a new town next to their former homes in Sinjar, a town in northern Iraq destroyed by the Islamic State (ISIS) militants who killed thousands of Yazidis, Sinjar’s mayor told VOA.

While the rubble of the old town will serve as a symbol of the atrocities committed by ISIS, the new town will provide places for thousands of displaced Yazidis, Sinjar Mayor Mahma Khalil said.

“People of Sinjar have very painful memories about the IS massacre in this town and they don’t want to return,” Khalil said. “We’re working on a new Sinjar that will be built according to standards of modern cities.”

Ancestral home

Sinjar was once an ancestral home for more than 200,000 people of the religious minority in northern Iraq.

IS militants took over the town in early August 2014 and murdered roughly 5,000 of its male residents and enslaved thousands of women and children. Those who managed to escape became trapped on Sinjar Mountain, leading to an international response, including U.S. airstrikes.

When the U.S.-backed Kurdish army, called the peshmerga, liberated the town in 2015, it was in ruins. Yazidi officials and organizations estimate that more than 80 percent of the city’s buildings and infrastructure have been destroyed.

“Out of 10,137 buildings, more than 5,700 buildings are razed to the ground and 3,400 buildings are 70 percent destroyed,” Khalil told VOA.

Chemical warfare

During their operation to push IS militants from the town, Kurdish peshmerga reported several incidents in which IS fired chemical rockets at their positions, leaving many of them hospitalized.

Khalil said cleaning the town from harmful chemical substances and rebuilding the town will be more costly and time-consuming than building the new Sinjar.

“There are also traces of chlorine and mustard gas weapons used by IS, making it extremely hard for people to return,” he said. “Our estimate is that building the whole new Sinjar will take one year and cost around $650 million.”

Iraqi Kurdistan Region President Masoud Barzani said in August that creating a new Sinjar will enable Yazidis to rebuild and remember.

“The old Sinjar should remain a symbol and memory for the next generation to know what happened to our people,” Barzani said during the second commemoration of the ISIS attack on the city.

Yazidis from Sinjar are scattered, with thousands living in nearby camps and others displaced abroad. Some fear returning because they worry IS will come back. Most have no homes left.

A new Sinjar will give them a place to start a future while retaining a memorial to those who lost their lives to ISIS, some ex-residents said.

‘Nothing but destruction’

“When I went back to Sinjar, I saw nothing but destruction, especially in its center,” a former resident of the city, Amina Seid, told VOA. She and her family escaped the town just hours before IS gained control in 2014.

“It’s great to hear that a new Sinjar will be built and people will be compensated,” said Seid, a refugee in northern Iraq. “My wish is that what happened to us will be something in history and we share that history to people who were lucky not to witness it.”

But some Yazidi activists say building a new city is not viable.

Haider Elias, president of a global Yazidi organization known as Yazda, described the new Sinjar plan as unrealistic, arguing that returning to the town is unlikely to happen soon.

“Building a new town or rebuilding the existing one doesn’t make sense,” Elias told VOA. “IS militants are only one mile away from the town and their artillery can easy reach it.”

He said that some Yazidis are still living under ISIS slavery. Their rescue, and ensuring the safety of Yazidi people from future attacks from extremists, should be given priority, he added.

“Between 20,000 and 30,000 Yazidis have left the country and some families will not come back anyways,” Elias said. “We need to think of some international protection or empowering those people to protect themselves before anything.”

Despite skepticism toward his plan, Khalil, the town mayor, said the idea of a new Sinjar is welcomed by possible donor countries and international organizations he has reached out to.

“There is an international willingness to make this happen,” Khalil said. “We will build a new city for our people and preserve the old one to show the future generation what ISIS did to us. It will be something like Hiroshima in Japan.”

Link to Article - Photos:

http://www.voanews.com/a/yazidi-hope-to ... 92845.html
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Jan 29, 2017 3:43 pm

Peshmerga able to remove ISIS from remaining areas in Shingal region

WHY HAS IT TAKEN SO LONG X(

Veteran Peshmerga and Former Chief of Staff of the Iraqi Army Babakir Zebari says the Peshmerga forces stationed in Shingal are capable of routing ISIS from remaining small pockets of land in the region and that they do not need help from anyone.

Zebari referred to fighters of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) or their affiliate groups based in the area who have expressed willingness for participation in any future offensive against ISIS in the region.

“If the Peshmerga needs them [PKK], then they will undoubtedly cooperate with the PKK, but the existing force there is able to liberate areas still held by ISIS in the Shingal region as we saw them in the first phase of the Mosul operation liberating many areas in Khazir and other areas,” Zebari told Rudaw.

Zebari maintained that most Kurdish areas in the Nineveh provinces have been liberated in the last two years except some small areas near Shingal in the remote areas west of Mosul.

The former Iraqi chief of staff said that the region’s open plains difficult terrain for the new kind of warfare the Peshmerga had to deal with, so they gained experience in pushing ISIS out of the region.

The town of Shingal which fell to ISIS in August 2014 was retaken by the Peshmerga in November 2015 in a massive operation.

Qasim Shasho, commander of the Shingal Command said for his part that his local Yezidi forces backed by the Peshmerga were ready for the mission of clearing ISIS from any remaining areas near Shingal or “any place in Iraq.”

Shingal Protection Units (YBS) a PKK affiliate, has claimed that they could help the Peshmerga in any future offensive against ISIS.

“We could work with the Peshmerga. And through Rudaw, we are calling for the formation of a joint command to reclaim the land of the Yezidis from ISIS which is about 40 percent,” Zardasht Shingali, a YBS fighter, told Rudaw.

Haider Shasho, commander of the Ezidkhan Protection Units echoed the need for a joint command for future operations against ISIS, saying: “there is probably many of our Yezidi children, daughters, sisters and mothers numbering a thousand still under ISIS might be in these places.”

“If we are asked by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and Peshmerga Ministry, we are ready,” he reiterated.

http://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/290120171
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