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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 Aug 04, 2024 1:09 am

KRG Interior Minister Reaffirms Commitment
    to Yezidis on Genocide Anniversary
On the 10th anniversary of the Yezidi genocide, Kurdistan Region Interior Minister Rebar Ahmed reiterated on Saturday the Region’s unwavering support for the Yezidi community and highlighted significant efforts to aid survivors and seek justice for the atrocities committed by Islamic State (ISIS)

Speaking at a commemorative event held by the Central Council of Yezidis in Germany, Minister Ahmed described the genocide as a dark chapter in modern history. "The genocides are coded as a dark period in modern history. Forcing Yezidi girls to become sex slaves shook the conscience of humanity," he said, emphasizing the brutal actions of ISIS, including mass killings and the enslavement of thousands of women and children.

    Ahmed praised the liberation of Sinjar by the Peshmerga forces, under the leadership of Masoud Barzani, president of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), as a symbol of resilience and resistance. "The Peshmerga forces led by President Barzani bravely liberated Sinjar. They gave several martyrs for this purpose," he noted
The Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has established 15 camps to accommodate over 140,000 Yezidi refugees, with tens of thousands more living outside the camps. An office dedicated to rescuing Yezidis has documented around 6,420 missing persons and has successfully rescued more than 3,570 individuals. Additionally, a financial support program announced by Prime Minister Masrour Barzani will provide monthly allowances to 3,000 ISIS survivors.

    Highlighting the importance of the Sinjar Agreement signed with the Iraqi federal government, Ahmed called for its full implementation to ensure stability and reconstruction in Sinjar. He also urged the German government to halt the deportation of Yezidi refugees until their areas are secure and rebuilt
[/list]
In closing, Ahmed expressed gratitude to the international community for recognizing the Yezidi genocide and reaffirmed the KRG's commitment to supporting the Yezidi community. "The Kurdistan Region will always remain a safe haven for those fleeing violence and persecution," he assured.

https://www.basnews.com/en/babat/856273
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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 Aug 04, 2024 1:21 am

Uncover Missing Genocide Victims

Marking the tenth anniversary of the Yezidi genocide on Saturday, Baba Sheikh, the Spiritual Leader of the Yezidis, called on the Iraqi federal government, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), and the international community to intensify efforts to discover the fate of the missing victims of the Yezidi genocide

"On August 3, 2014, the Sinjar region witnessed one of the most heinous human crimes in modern history, when the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIS) invaded this region, committing acts of genocide against the Yezidis," Baba Sheikh stated. He described the atrocity as a deliberate attempt to erase Yezidi culture and history.

"On this sad anniversary, we all stand together to remember those painful events that claimed the lives of thousands of innocent women, children, and men, who were subjected to murder, kidnapping, torture, and slavery in the modern era," he added.

Despite these horrors, Baba Sheikh highlighted the Yezidis' unwavering determination, asserting, "The Yezidis, with their steadfastness and strong will, have proven to the entire world that they are a people whose will cannot be erased or broken."

Expressing deep sorrow and solidarity with the families of the martyrs, victims, missing persons, and survivors, Baba Sheikh renewed calls for comprehensive support from the federal government, the KRG, the international community, and various organizations. He stressed the necessity of health and psychological care, as well as the provision of a decent living and reconstruction for the affected communities.

Baba Sheikh urged the formation of a specialized court to try the accused and bring perpetrators to justice, emphasizing the importance of documenting these crimes to prevent their recurrence. He also called for serious efforts from Baghdad, Erbil, and the international community to uncover the fate of the missing Yezidis and to return them to their families safely.

"Revealing the fate of the missing and searching for them represents an essential step towards achieving justice and restoring dignity to all who suffered from these crimes," he stated.

Baba Sheikh expressed gratitude for the support provided by the KRG, the international community, civil society organizations, and others over the past decade. He highlighted the importance of continuing these efforts to ensure the dignified return of displaced Yezidis, rebuilding their communities, and promoting peace and stability in the Shingal region.

In closing, Baba Sheikh affirmed, "The memory of the Yezidi genocide will remain alive in our hearts and minds, and will remain an incentive for all of us to work towards building a better future, one of justice, equality, and peace."

https://www.basnews.com/en/babat/856280

My Heart As Always, Goes Out To The Gentle Yezidis, Who Have Been Totally Ignored By The Entire World For The Past 10 YEARS
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Aug 04, 2024 1:35 am

Treatment in Germany for Yazidi survivors

Over 1,000 Yazidis who survived the Islamic State (ISIS) atrocities have received treatment in Germany, said the head of office to rescue Yazidis on the tenth anniversary of a genocide against the ethno-religious group by ISIS

“As per an agreement between the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) and the Baden-Wurttemberg region in Germany, 1,000 people had to be sent abroad for treatment in 2015. This was implemented and over 1,000 people were sent to Germany,”

Hussein Qaidi, head of the Office for Rescuing Abducted Yazidis, told Rudaw on Saturday that according to unofficial figures between 120-130 thousand Yazidis have left Iraq since the genocide.

The office is affiliated with the Kurdistan Region Presidency and was established in 2014 when ISIS swept through the Yazidi heartland of Shingal, committing genocide.

The International Organization for Migration (IOM) said in a report in 2021 that “Fears of persecution have caused large numbers of Yazidis to seek asylum outside of Iraq.”

“1,100 survivors, the majority of whom are Yazidi women and children, arrived in Germany via the Baden-Württemberg Special Quota Humanitarian Admission Programme, and other countries have since implemented similar initiatives,” it added.

Qaidi said 6,417 Yazidis were abducted by ISIS, and 3,579 of them have been rescued so far, adding that this number includes 1,210 women.

“We assure all Yazidi brothers and sisters that the work of the teams of the office to rescue the kidnapped Yazidis will continue until all are rescued.

Thousands of the victims need long-term psychological treatment and special care which should be provided,” Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani said a speech delivered at an event in Erbil to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Yazidi Genocide.

“Since the genocide, nearly 400 thousand people [from Shingal] have come to the Kurdistan Region, living in 21 camps. Nearly 250 thousand of them still remain in camps in scorching summer and freezing winter. How should their conditions be? Of course bad. Therefore, they should be returned to their homes as soon as possible,” Qaidi said, noting that between 25-30 percent of Yazidis have returned to Shingal so far, associating people’s unwillingness to return to their homes with the presence of several armed groups and lack of basic services.

Baghdad and Erbil signed an agreement in 2020 to normalize the situation in Shingal, but the deal has yet to be implemented.

    Despite both the KRG and the Iraqi government calling on all armed groups to leave Shingal on several occasions, the agreement has been rejected by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) whose proxies dominate parts of Shingal
“The Iraqi federal government should cooperate with the Kurdistan Regional Government to implement the Shingal agreement and normalize the situation [in the town].

Serving the people of Shingal and the Yazidi community should be the priority of all of us. We should all work together so that Shingal and Yazidis will no longer become the victims of partisan and political agenda,” President Barzani said at the Erbil event.

Iraqi parliament passed the Yazidi Survivors Bill in 2021 which offers reparations to the survivors following languishing in the legislature for two years.

“Today's passage of Iraq’s Yazidi Survivors Bill is an important first step in acknowledging the gender-based trauma of sexual violence & need for tangible redress. Implementation of the law will need to be focused comprehensively supporting & sustainably reintegrating survivors,” Nadia Murad, one of the survivors of the genocide said in a post on X (then Twitter) at the time.

Murad is a prominent Yazidi activist and a Nobel Peace Prize laureate.

“Ten years on, our community — especially the survivors — remains resilient, tirelessly fighting for justice, rebuilding their lives, and restoring their community,” she said in a separate post on Saturday.

Qaidi slammed the Iraqi government for failing to implement the Yazidi Survivors Law.

“Unfortunately, the Iraqi federal government has taken only one step [to assist Yazidis] which was the passage of the Yazidi Survivors Law in 2021,” the head of the office said. “However, this law has 30 articles and 13 clauses but I think between 20-30 of them have not been implemented,” he lamented.

The Iraqi government has designated August 3 as a national day to remember the victims of massacres committed by ISIS in 2014 in Iraq. The KRG has welcomed the decision.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/030820242
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Aug 04, 2024 1:41 am

Yazidi Genocide turning point

Kurdistan President Nechirvan Barzani said on Saturday that the 2014 genocide of Yazidis by the Islamic State (ISIS) ten years ago was a “turning point” in the history of Iraq and the Kurdistan Region, adding that the catastrophic incident shocked the whole world

"The genocide of Yazidis in the modern era is a grave, unbelievable shock which shook the whole humanity in the world. It became a turning point in the history of Kurdistan and Iraq… The whole international community should have worked together so that such a crime is never and never repeated elsewhere,” President Barzani said in a speech delivered at an event in Erbil to commemorate the tenth anniversary of the Yazidi Genocide.

Dozens of Kurdish officials, families of the victims and clerics from different religions attended the ceremony which was held at the University of Kurdistan - Hawler (UKH). The ceremony was organized by an office, affiliated with the Kurdistan Region Presidency, which rescues Yazidis kidnapped by ISIS in 2014.

When ISIS swept through the Yazidi heartland of Shingal in August 2014, committing genocide.

President Barzani said at the event that Yazidis are still suffering from the consequences of the genocide. The fate of 2,596 of more than 6,417 Yazidis abducted by ISIS in 2014 remains unclear, he added.

    "The destruction of Shingal and its vicinity, the displacement of hundreds of thousands of the residents of Shingal and the area, and the pain from all this [suffering] will not be forgotten in either 10 years or ever," President Barzani said
Everything should be done to make sure the perpetrators are punished, justice is served and the victims are compensated, he stressed.

President Barzani said the office to rescue Yazidis will continue its work until all the kidnapped Yazidis are rescued.

“We assure all Yazidi brothers and sisters that the work of the teams of the office to rescue the kidnapped Yazidis will continue until all are rescued. Thousands of the victims need long-term psychological treatment and special care which should be provided,” he said.

He noted that Shingal needs renovation and basic services so that its residents are able to return.

Baghdad and Erbil signed an agreement in 2020 to normalize the situation in Shingal, but the deal has yet to be implemented.

Despite both the KRG and the Iraqi government calling on all armed groups to leave Shingal on several occasions, the agreement has been rejected by the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) whose proxies dominate parts of Shingal.

“The Iraqi federal government should cooperate with the Kurdistan Regional Government to implement the Shingal agreement and normalize the situation [in the town]. Serving the people of Shingal and the Yazidi community should be the priority of all of us. We should all work together so that Shingal and Yazidis will no longer become the victims of partisan and political agenda,” President Barzani said at the Erbil event.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/030820241
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Aug 04, 2024 3:34 pm

KRG to Aid Yezidi Survivors

At the direction of Prime Minister Masrour Barzani, the Kurdistan Government (KRG) will provide financial assistance to more than 3,500 Yezidi citizens who survived the terrorist organization Islamic State (ISIS)

"The financial assistance will cover all the Yezidi citizens who have been rescued from the hands of ISIS, even those who went abroad after their release," Saeed Jardo, head of the Lalsh Cultural and Social Center, announced in a news conference. He added that Yezidi citizens living abroad can fill out an online form that will be published by the Lalsh center on Sunday.

Jardo expressed gratitude to Prime Minister Barzani for the financial support and emphasized the Prime Minister's ongoing commitment to ensuring the rights of the Yezidis.

Distribution Schedule:

    - Sunday, August 4, 2024: Sharia

    - Monday, August 5, 2024: Khanke

    - Tuesday, August 6, 2024: Sheikhan

    - Wednesday, August 7, 2024: Derabun
Survivors living in Sinjar can visit distribution centers in the city every four days to receive the financial assistance, with a special committee formed for this purpose.

Additionally, the Ministry of Education of the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) has decided to facilitate the resumption of studies for survivors of ISIS attacks, as per the recommendation of Prime Minister Barzani.

A special committee, supervised by the General Directorate of the provinces and the autonomous administrations, particularly in Duhok province and Zakho autonomous administration, will oversee this process.

Director Generals of the provinces and autonomous administrations are empowered to exempt survivors from age requirements to enable their return to education. Survivors who completed the 9th grade of primary school before being captured by ISIS and subsequently exceeded the legal age for education will be allowed to continue their studies.

Furthermore, registered survivors who have graduated from the 9th grade of primary school are entitled to free education in all private institutions for five academic years.

https://www.basnews.com/en/babat/856356
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Aug 06, 2024 8:34 pm

Yazidis seek justice on 10th anniversary

Advocates for justice for Iraq’s Yazidi community say much more needs to be done 10 years on to address the brutal genocide it experienced at the hands of Islamic State militants on August 3, 2014, and its aftermath

On August 3, 2014, Islamic State militants invaded Iraq’s Sinjar province brutally attacking, killing, displacing, and enslaving hundreds of thousands of Yazidis in their ancient homeland in the country’s north. Ten years on, more than 6,000 women and children remain captives of the Islamic State with nearly 2,800 still missing. Many of the displaced still live in camps which Iraq says will close.

Yazidi activists and religious freedom advocates say restorative justice is needed for the community to recover from the genocide and remain in Iraq. Speaking at Washington’s Wilson Center, they use the terms Islamic State and ISIS interchangeably.

Yazidi lawyer Natia Navrouzov of the Yazda organization, which supports genocide victims, said much of the response to Islamic State has been military “to take back territory,” but restorative justice for the victims is also needed.

“What we really need from Iraq and KRG [Kurdistan Regional Government] with support from the international community is a proper transitional justice legal framework. All the components of transitional justice. So, criminal accountability, truth telling, reparations. And what is really missing is guarantees on non-repetition.

    People are asked to go back but nothing guarantees that another genocide won’t happen in two, five, or ten years
Navrouzov called for an international court to try the militants from more than 80 countries which committed atrocities against the Yazidis. Iraq, meanwhile, says it will shut down a U.N. investigation team, UNITAD, documenting crimes by September 17.

“All we got in Iraq is terrorism trials, so ISIS members are just being prosecuted for terrorism, membership to a terrorism group. Survivors are not aware, not involved, often the perpetrators clearly mentioned that they enslaved Yazidis, and this is completely disregarded. We don’t know if the evidence UNITAD collected will be accessible to continue at least these prosecutions by third states, like Germany and others. So that’s very worrying. What is missing now is the component of trust,” she said.

Other activists point to Germany’s prosecution of eight Islamic State members, including three for genocide, while the Netherlands and Sweden are believed to be preparing trials later this year for such crimes.

Former U.S. representative for Virginia, Frank Wolf told the panel that another way to rebuild trust was by giving Yazidis, an underrepresented minority in Iraq, “greater representation in leadership positions at the federal level in Baghdad.”

Nadine Maenza, president of the International Religious Freedom Secretariat told VOA that Yazidis and other religious minorities in Iraq need robust representation.

“There hasn’t been an election in Sinjar since 2003. The people that live in Sinjar should be able to choose their own leaders. They should be a part of their own governance and security. It’s in the best interest of the Iraqi government to have peace and security in Sinjar and this is how you get it,” she said.

Pari Ibrahim, who directs the Free Yezidi Foundation, added that it is “key for the prevention of future genocide against our community to make sure that those who funded the Islamic State structure are held accountable.”

The Yazidis have endured 74 genocides throughout their history

https://www.voanews.com/a/yazidis-seek- ... 29458.html
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Aug 06, 2024 9:14 pm

Kurdistan President's pivotal role in
    addressing Yazidi crisis
Hussein al-Qaydi, the head of the Office for the Missing and Abducted Persons in the Kurdistan, highlighted President Nechirvan Barzani’s crucial role in tackling one of the most significant humanitarian challenges of the 21st century

In a statement to Shafaq News Agency, al-Qaydi described the unprecedented humanitarian tragedy of 2014 when ISIS launched a brutal attack on the Yazidis in Sinjar, leading to the abduction of thousands of women and children.

Al-Qaydi praised President Barzani's strategic vision in addressing the crisis, noting that at that time, Barzani prioritized rescuing Yazidi captives and established the office as a dedicated body to handle this sensitive issue.

"He developed a comprehensive plan for rescuing and rehabilitating the abducted, relying on intensive diplomatic efforts and diligent work," al-Qaydi explained. "Barzani viewed the resilience of the captives as an inspiration for humanity and insisted on recognizing every survivor as a symbol of strength and renewal."

Thanks to this vision, the office has successfully transformed stories of suffering into models of success, aiding in the reintegration of survivors into their communities. Al-Qaydi observed, "Today, we see the fruits of these efforts as tears of sorrow turn into tears of joy with the return of many abductees."

He concluded by reaffirming the commitment to continue working under President Barzani’s guidance to ensure that all survivors receive the necessary support to rebuild their lives. Al-Qaydi called on the international community to continue supporting their cause and ensuring justice for the victims. "Our survivors' stories have become a global symbol of courage and human resilience against oppression."

In August 2014, the Yazidis faced a genocidal campaign by ISIS, which involved mass killings, abductions, and destruction.

President Nechirvan Barzani swiftly took measures to support the Yazidis, including establishing the Office for Rescuing the Abducted, which has since rescued 3,576 individuals.

In the same year, Barzani's office saved 1,208 women and 1,070 children and provided financial support to displaced persons, numbering approximately 135,860 in camps and 189,337 in other areas of the Region.

Barzani's efforts also included advocating for international recognition of the genocide, supporting reconstruction and rehabilitation, and protecting destroyed religious sites. He has repeatedly affirmed his full commitment to supporting survivors and continuing efforts until all captives are freed.

https://shafaq.com/en/Iraq/Kurdistan-Pr ... s-revealed
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Aug 07, 2024 8:01 pm

UN prepares to hand over
    ISIS evidence to Iraq
The United Nations team investigating crimes committed by the Islamic State (ISIS) in Iraq is preparing to share with Iraqi authorities the 40 terabytes of evidence compiled in its six-year investigation as it wraps up its mission next month.

"We are now in the process of providing our results to the competent Iraqi authorities," UNITAD's public information office said Tuesday in an email reply to Rudaw. "This includes a consolidated, digital version of these evidence holdings... as well as investigative reports assessing that acts committed by ISIS/Da'esh in Iraq may amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide."

"A copy of this original evidence will be kept by the United Nations as part of its records and archives, together with other materials originally collected by the Team, in line with United Nations policies and best practices and relevant international law," it added.

UNITAD (United Nations Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Da'esh/ISIS) was established in 2017 by the UN Security Council at the request of the Iraqi government to ensure that ISIS militants would be held accountable for their crimes. The team's work included collecting witness testimony, leading the exhumation of mass graves, and training Iraq's judiciary.

The investigative team, however, had a difficult relationship with the Iraqi government, reportedly due to UNITAD's reluctance to share information with Iraqi authorities over concerns about the use of the death penalty. Iraq requested UNITAD end its mission and its mandate will expire on September 17.

"Steps have been taken over the past months, in cooperation with the Government of Iraq, to ensure an orderly drawdown and liquidation of the mission in advance of this date," UNITAD's public information office stated.

The UNITAD team has "been working diligently to ensure the Iraqi authorities are in the best position possible to advance domestic accountability efforts prior to the conclusion of the mandate, while at the same time respecting the end date of the mission," it added.

In response to the allegation of a poor relationship with Iraqi authorities, UNITAD said they have cooperated closely for six years.

"It is important to note that the Team has worked closely and daily with Iraqi counterparts over this six-year period, in particular the Iraqi Judiciary, Mass Graves Directorate, and the Medico-Legal Directorate, to provide equipment, training and technical assistance. This has required significant cooperation, supported national capacities," it said, adding that "enjoyed extensive support" from the national authorities.

Representatives of Yazidi victims of ISIS have expressed concern about what will happen with the evidence gathered, including ongoing exhumations of mass graves, and the goal of seeing some justice through trials on the charges of genocide and crimes against humanity

UNITAD said they are working to ensure the investigation can continue in the future.

As UNITAD closes, we are also focusing on the provision of capacity-building to the competent Iraqi authorities, including evidence management; witness protection and psychosocial support; mass grave excavations; digital forensics; digitization and archiving of ISIS-related records, to ensure sustainability of the progress that has been made over the past six years as part of ongoing accountability processes," the public information office stated.

According to UNITAD, in the last six years the team has excavated 68 ISIS-related mass graves and the victim remains that have been identified have been returned to their loved ones. In addition, "18 million ISIS-related paper records are now digitized and archived in cooperation with the Iraqi judiciary, and data - ISIS-related documents, photos, videos - has been acquired from a significant number of digital devices seized from ISIS by the Iraqi authorities," the office stated.

The UNITAD team has collected some 40 terabytes of evidence

https://www.rudaw.net/english/world/070820243
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Aug 09, 2024 12:13 pm

Yezidi Genocide at Security Council

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region (Kurdistan 24) – It was a week of 10th anniversary remembrance in Kurdistan Region, for the Yezidi genocide occurred in 2014 at the hands of ISIS terrorists

Many international politicians, officials and media networks covered also made particular reports and show discussing the genocidal aftermath happened from ISIS terrorists attacks.

    At the Security Council meeting on August 8th, 2024, Japan's Deputy Ambassador to the Security Council, Shino Mitsuko stated “what ISIS did to the Yazidis must not be allowed to happen again, the world should not forget what ISIS did to the Yazidis 10 years ago”
Mitsuko stressed that those who used violence against the Yazidi women should be brought to the justice and prevent a reiterate of similar experiences all over the world.

Mitsuko highlighted a serious issue about the technology that caused a global threat "armed groups and terrorists like ISIS and al-Qaeda must be prevented from using technology because they pose a serious threat to societies,"

    The Deputy Ambassador called the Security Council not to forget the violence took place by ISIS against the Yazidis. “Those who did this to the Yazidis must be brought to justice. What ISIS did to the Yazidis 10 years ago must not be allowed to reiterate anywhere in the world.” She stated
On August 3, 2014, ISIS terrorists launched an assault on Sinjar, a district with a population of approximately 500,000 at the time.

The attack displaced around 250,000 people, predominantly Yezidis, with 50,000 fleeing to Mount Sinjar, where they were besieged by ISIS forces.

Following the liberation of Sinjar, about 183,000 refugees have not returned due to ongoing security concerns, lack of services, and inadequate livelihoods.

The massacre resulted in the deaths of about 3,000 individuals, with 6,000 Yezidi women and children kidnapped by ISIS.

During the siege of Mount Sinjar, ISIS massacred residents in at least six villages, most notably in Kocho, where approximately 400 people were killed. In the village of Hardan, ISIS terrorists killed between 250 and 300 people.

Post-liberation efforts have led to the discovery of numerous mass graves, totaling 89. Additionally, ISIS's control over Sinjar resulted in the burning and damaging of approximately 6,000 houses in the district.

https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/story/36 ... ty-Council
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Aug 10, 2024 8:54 am

Justice for Yazidis incomplete

Ten years after the Islamic State (ISIS) committed genocide, the United States government believes that justice for the Yezidi community is “incomplete.”

“There's much work that remains to be done” for Yezidis and other communities in the Kurdistan Region and Iraq that were affected by ISIS, US Ambassador-at-Large for Global Criminal Justice Beth Van Schaack told Rudaw in an interview on August 6.

Thousands of Yazidi families are still unable to return to their homes because of lack of reconstruction and ongoing insecurity, mass graves are still being discovered and exhumed, and 2,596 Yazidis abducted by ISIS in 2014 are still missing.

As the United Nations wraps up its investigation into ISIS crimes at the request of the Iraqi government, Van Schaack said “It's true that justice has been incomplete.”
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Aug 12, 2024 8:22 pm

Three Yezidi Girls Rescued

Three Yezidi girls have been rescued from Syria’s al-Hol Camp and returned to their families in the Kurdistan Region, while the search continues for thousands of others still missing after being abducted by the Islamic State (ISIS) in 2014.

The girls were rescued on Monday and brought back to the Kurdistan Region, according to a report by Kurdistan 24.

Hussein Qaidi, the head of the Kurdistan Region's Special Office for Yezidi Abductees Affairs, stated that so far, 3,581 Yezidi girls and women have been rescued, but 2,592 remain unaccounted for.

Qaidi highlighted the ongoing efforts by the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) to locate and rescue the abducted Yezidis, many of whom are believed to be in Syria, particularly in al-Hol Camp.

Nazim Harki, head of the 17th branch of the Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP), expressed happiness over the return of the rescued girls and reaffirmed their commitment to rescuing all those still held by ISIS. He also extended thanks to Kurdistan Region Prime Minister Masrour Barzani and the KRG for their continued efforts.

Qaidi reiterated that locating and rescuing the kidnapped Yezidis remains a priority for his office. He noted that despite numerous attempts, accessing al-Hol Camp has been challenging due to restrictions imposed by the authorities in Syrian Kurdistan.

The Islamic State's brutal attack on Sinjar in August 2014 resulted in the abduction of over 6,000 Yezidis, most of whom were women and children. While many have been rescued, the plight of thousands of others remains unresolved.

https://www.basnews.com/en/babat/857147
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Aug 15, 2024 11:23 pm

Serious initiatives to rescue missing Yazidi

Iraq's Nineveh Governor calls for "serious initiatives" to rescue missing Yazidi

Shafaq News/ The governor of Iraq's Nineveh on Thursday renewed calls for international action to support the Yazidi minority, marking a decade since the Islamic State (ISIS) group massacred hundreds of its members in the village of Kojo.

Governor Abdul Qadir al-Dakheel said the Yazidi community continues to suffer from the aftermath of the 2014 genocide, urging the international community and the Iraqi government to provide more support for survivors and search for missing persons.

"We must launch real initiatives to search for the missing abductees and compensate the victims," he said in a speech commemorating the Kojo massacre. "The world cannot turn a blind eye to the ongoing suffering of the Yazidi people."

The Yazidi community, which follows an ancient religion, has faced persecution for centuries. The Islamic State's brutal campaign against them in 2014, which included mass killings, enslavement, and sexual violence, was widely condemned as genocide.

While significant progress has been made in liberating Yazidi areas and defeating ISIS, many Yazidis remain displaced and traumatized.

The governor emphasized the need for continued support to help them rebuild their lives and communities.

https://shafaq.com/en/Iraq/Iraq-s-Ninev ... ing-Yazidi
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Aug 17, 2024 1:10 am

Yazidi's new village

KOCHO — Ten years ago, their village in Iraq's Sinjar region was decimated by Islamic State militants. Yazidi men and boys were separated and massacred, Yazidi women and children were abducted, many raped or taken as slaves

Now the survivors are coming back to Kocho, where Yazidi community leaders on Thursday announced plans for an internationally funded new village nearby to house those displaced in what was one of the bloodiest massacres by the Islamic State group against their tiny and insular religious minority.

On Aug. 15, 2014, the extremists killed hundreds in Kocho alone. During their rampage across the wider region of Sinjar — the Yazidi heartland — ISIS killed and enslaved thousands of Yazidis, whom the Sunni militants consider heretics. To this day, the Kocho massacre remains as a glaring example of ISIS atrocities against the Yazidi community.

    Kocho could have been saved, by 15 August 2014, the world had been aware of ongoing ISIS slaughter of Yazidis for more than a week but did NOTHING to protect the inhabitants of Kocho
Out of 1,470 people in Kocho at the time, 1,027 were abducted by the ISIS, 368 were killed and only 75 managed to escape, according to a report by the Middle East Center at the London School of Economics.

All the permits have now been finalized and construction for the new village will break ground on Sept. 5, said Naif Jaso, a prominent Yazidi leader.

The New Kocho is planned to be built near the village of Tel Qassab, 10 kilometers (6.2 miles) north from the original Kocho, now mostly in ruins.

The International Organization for Migration, the U.N. Development Program and Nadia’s Initiative, an nonprofit founded by Yazidi survivor Nadia Murad, are hoping it will provide much-needed housing and infrastructure to encourage displaced Yazidis to return to their historic homeland.

Their return is a thorny issue and few Yazidis have trickled back to their former homes. In Sinjar, the situation is particularly grim, with destroyed infrastructure, little funding for rebuilding and multiple armed groups vying to carve up the area.

    Though ISIS was defeated in Iraq in 2017, as of April this year only 43% of the more than 300,000 people displaced from Sinjar have come back, IOM says
Jaso said 133 displaced families have said they are willing to return and settle in New Kocho Village, which envisages parks, marketplaces, a health facility, a psychiatric support center and recreational spaces along with homes for people.

Each house will be built according to the size and needs of each family, Nadia’s Initiative’s spokesperson Salah Qasim said.

Alyas Salih Qasim, one of the few male survivors from Kocho says he plans to go back once the new village is ready. He has been living for years in a displacement camp in northern Iraq’s semi-autonomous Kurdish region and plans to settle in the new village.

“I would love to return to my original house,” he said but was not optimistic about others — many Yazidis have since migrated and started new lives elsewhere.

But it's “difficult ... to return to an empty village, and it’s better if we settle in the New Kocho once they finish constructing it," he said.

Earlier this year, Iraq's government ordered displacement camps in the Kurdish region housing thousands of Yazidis to be closed by July 30 and even offered payments of 4 million dinars (about $3,000) to those who leave, but later postponed the order.

Fatima Ismael, another survivor of the Kocho massacre who has been living in the same camp as Qasim for nine years and also hopes to settled in the new village, said the old village of Kocho contains too many painful memories.

The remains of her husband and two of her sons were found in a mass graves while three other sons are still missing, with empty graves waiting for them at the local cemetery.

“I can never return home because I can’t look at the empty rooms,” she said, though she misses the old village community. “How can I live with that?”

Survivors still live in fear of ISIS and part of the reason for placing the new Kocho at a distance from the old village is to be closer to mountains where many Yazidis took refuge during the militants' rampage. Since their defeat, ISIS militants have gone underground but are still able to stage surprise attacks.

Commemorations and ceremonies like Thursday's bring back traumatic memories.

“It feels like the first day every time there’s a ceremony or event to remember these days,” Qasim said. “Whatever they do for us, or how hard they try, what we saw is unbearably terrible and impossible to forget.”

https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/story/36 ... -to-return
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Aug 19, 2024 10:11 pm

15 August 2014
ISIS began massacring people in Kocho

The Islamic State (ISIS) conquered the village of Kocho (Kojo) in the Sinjar (Shingal) area of northern Iraq. On August 15, it began massacring several hundred men and elderly women of the Yazidi community, an ethno-religious minority in Iraq and Syria, after they failed to convert to Islam. Nadia Murad, then 21 years old, witnessed the execution of her mother and brothers, and then was abducted along with other young Yazidi women as sex slaves

Responsibility to Protect (R2P) is an international norm for states to prevent genocide, mass atrocities, and war crimes, in response to the failure to do so in the former Yugoslavia and Rwanda. The US airdropped food to trapped refugees on nearby Mount Sinjar, but sat on the sidelines as the massacre ensued in this village.

Ten years later, the international community still has a Responsibility to Remember (R2R) to the Yazidis who died, to those dealing with post-traumatic stress disorder (PTSD), to the more than 2,000 who are still missing, and to the other victims of war who are only increasing in number in the 21st century - from the north of Iraq to Ukraine to Gaza. The United Nations Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Da’esh/ISIL (UNITAD) was a dedicated R2R body. Yet, its mandate will soon be terminated.

Murad was able to escape and arrived in Germany in 2015. She was one of the fortunate also appointed as a UN goodwill ambassador, the first to represent “Dignity of Survivors of Human Trafficking.” Murad was eventually awarded the Nobel Peace Prize, the first Iraqi to ever receive it.

In 2016 she met the Beirut-born British barrister Amal Alamuddin Clooney, who agreed to represent Murad. Both addressed the United Nations, advocating that the ISIS campaign be designated as a genocide. Their work was essential to the Security Council agreeing to establish UNITAD in 2017.

In the lobby of the United Nations General Assembly, a replica of Picasso’s Guernica mural hangs above the podium where international figures field questions from the media, a form of R2R for the multilateral body, as the failure of the world community to act after Guernica eventually led to World War Two. By bearing witness to Guernica, UN diplomats would work to ensure it would not happen again. Yet, Guernica did happen again: in Halabja at the end of the 20th century, and Kocho was the Guernica of the 21st century.

UNITAD was an attempt to prevent future Guernicas. The Iraqi judicial system lacked the infrastructure to investigate and try all the members of ISIS responsible for these crimes; hence, Baghdad requested the aid of the UN in the form of UNITAD, which has been collecting evidence since 2017.

Yet, the Iraqi government sought to terminate this body’s mandate in 2024 due to conflicts with the UN team investigating the crimes. This denies justice to the survivors of ISIS atrocities. Closing such a body is not only a loss for the female survivors of gender-based violence, the Yazidis, as well as the Iraqi nation in general, it sets a tragic global precedent; a dedicated UN body is imperative to document genocidal and gendercidal violence, and victims of war.

The genocidal rampage that ensued in Kocho in August 2014 continued for the women in captivity. To forge homogeneity within their “Islamic” state, ISIS sought the erasure of a pre-Islamic past by destroying pre-Islamic antiquities and what it deemed as “pre-Islamic peoples,” expelling Christians from Mosul, or enslaving Yazidi women to ensure that they could not give birth to future Yazidi children, a form of genocide specifically targeted against one gender, in what can be more specifically called a gendercide. Their captivity not only led to their estrangement from other Yazidis, but any future children born out of this slavery would not be considered part of the endogenous community.

The work of lawyers or human rights investigators is like a historian, trying to collect material from the past from primary sources to construct a narrative in the present. Primary sources, in this case, include the videos and documents produced by ISIS itself documenting their genocide, as well as the testimonies of the victims.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/opinion/19082024
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Aug 22, 2024 9:41 pm

Yazidi exodus date in official records

PETRICHOR calls for correction of Yazidi exodus date in official records

Shafaq News/ The human rights organization PETRICHOR urged on Wednesday the correction of what it describes as a "distortion" in the historical record of the Yazidi exodus from Sinjar in 2014. The group emphasized that official documents have incorrectly listed the date of the exodus as August 1, when in fact, the correct date is August 3.

In a statement received by Shafaq News Agency, the organization expressed deep concern over the issuance of official documents by the Migration and Displacement Office in Duhok, which incorrectly stated August 1, 2014, as the official date of the Yazidi exodus. "Field testimonies and historical facts indicate that the overwhelming majority fled on August 3, 2014, following the tragic attack by the terrorist organization ISIS on Sinjar," the statement noted.

Petrichor underscored the importance of accurate historical documentation for ensuring victims' rights and achieving justice. "We stress the need to review these documents and correct any errors that may have been introduced, in line with human rights standards that prioritize transparency and justice in documenting events," the organization stated.

"Accurate documentation of facts is not only a necessity but also an integral part of the rights of victims, particularly the Yazidi displaced who endured the horrors of those dark days."

Petrichor warned that any attempt to alter or reframe historical facts to serve specific interests is alarming and violates human rights, calling for a review of these documents to ensure the preservation of the actual events and the rights of Yazidi refugees.

"Protecting historical truth is fundamental to achieving justice and fairness. We remind that manipulating history can distort facts and hinder efforts to hold those responsible for the events in Sinjar accountable," the statement concluded.

In 2014, ISIS launched a devastating assault on Sinjar, leading to the displacement of over 250,000 residents and the uncovering of around 90 mass graves. The attack on August 3 targeted a district with an estimated population of 500,000, primarily Yezidis.

The aftermath of this nearly decade-long assault is marked by severe destruction, including damage to thousands of houses. Reports indicate that the massacre claimed approximately 3,000 lives, and ISIS kidnapped around 6,000 Yezidi women and children.

https://shafaq.com/en/Iraq/PETRICHOR-ca ... al-records
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