While the recent
beheadings of two Westerners by ISIS/IS has garnered headlines around the
world, ISIS has a history of brutality that has terrorized northern Iraq.
A recent report by Amnesty International
provides us with some examples of how ISIS/IS, a Sunni-based terrorist
organization, has targeted non-Arab and non-Sunni communities.
Beginning on June 10,
2014, after capturing Mosul, IS forces began to spread its military influence
throughout areas in Northern Iraq where there is a concentration of Yezidis
along with a relatively wide selection of Christians, Shi'a Muslims, Kadai and
Sabean Mandaeans. All of these different cultures had lived in harmony
for centuries. For those of you that are not familiar with Yezedis,
they are a Kurdish-speaking people that live mainly in Northern Iraq.
They follow the Yezidi faith, a religion that is drawn from Islamic
Sufism and Zoroastrianism, the faith of Persia. The Yezidis claim that
their religion is the oldest in the world with a calendar that dates back more
than 6760 years, longer than the Jewish, Islamic or Christian calendars.
The Yezidis have been persecuted for centuries by Muslims who believe
that the Yezidi's primary diety, the Peacock Angel, is actually Satan.
During the hostilities in
Northern Iraq, approximately 830,000 inhabitants were able to leave the area
conquered by IS fighters. The inhabitants that were unable to leave were
subjected to threats of death if they did not convert to IS preferred form of
Islam. Most of those that did flee are now living in Iraqi Kurdistan,
living in makeshift camps and public buildings where there are insufficient
facilities to provide for the needs of hundreds of thousands of internally
displaced persons. The United Nations, through the UNHCR,
declared the area a humanitarian emergency and began to provide aid for
displaced families. Sadly, those who escaped with their lives are the
lucky ones.
Here is a map that will help orient us to the
areas in Iraq controlled by IS and Iraqi Kurdistan:
It appears that IS has
been responsible for mass killings in the Sinjar region of Iraq. In this
posting, I will outline the mass killings undertaken by IS in the villages of
Qiniyeh and Kocho/Kuju.
On August 3, 2014 near
the village of Qiniyeh, between 85 and 90 men and boy were executed after they
were trapped when trying to flee advancing IS fighters. In this case, it
appears that IS fighters were punishing those who attempted to repel their
advance. Here is an eyewitness report from a villager:
“After the Peshmerga who used to protect our villages fled in the night
between 2 and 3 August, me and many other men from the village [Tal Qasab] took
our weapons (most of us had Kalashnikovs, for the protection of our families)
and clashed with IS militants. At about 7 or 8am we ran out of ammunition and
ran away toward the mountain (Mount Sinjar). We stopped in the village of
Qiniyeh, near the foot of the mountain. We were about 90 men and youths and
with us were more than 100 women and children from our families.
At about 1pm or so IS militants came and spoke to us and
said that they were only looking for Peshmerga and asked if we had weapons and
said they would kill anyone found to have weapons. We had hidden our weapons
and said we had none. They said we could go home soon and left. After half an
hour some 20 IS vehicles came and surrounded us. My relative Nasser Elias tried
to run away and they shot him dead.
They split us into two groups, men and boys of 12 and older
in one group and women and younger children in another group. They started to
load the women and children in the vehicles and made us (men and boys) walk to
the nearby wadi. The youngest of the group was my brother Nusrat, 12 years old.
We were made to squat by the edge of the wadi, which was deep. They told us to
convert to Islam and we refused.
“One grabbed me by my shirt from behind and pulled me up and
tried to shoot me but his weapon did not fire. My brother Nusrat was scared and
was crying. They opened fire from behind us. I fell into the wadi and was not
injured. My brother Nusrat was right next to me and was killed. My father,
Elias, and my four brothers, Faysal, Ma’amun, Sa’id and Sofian, were all
killed. Most of the other men and boys were also killed, including more than 43
of my relatives.
After the IS men left I waited
and then ran away to the mountain. I only know four others who survived: my
neighbour Fawas, Khalaf Mirze and his son ‘Ayad (Khalaf had been shot in the
back, shoulder and leg, and ‘Ayad in the shoulder) and another man called Ziad.
I don’t know if any others survived.”
As well, IS killed at
least a hundred (or more) men and boys in the village of Kocho/Kuju (population
1200) on August 15, 2014 and then abducted the village's women and children.
After assembling at the local secondary school, the men and boys were
loaded into six pick-up trucks, taken to nearby locations and shot.
Because the killings took place at different locations and times and
there have been very few survivors, it is difficult to ascertain how many boys
and men were killed although it appears that up to 400 males in the village
were taken.
Here is an excerpt from
the testimony of a witness, a 59 year old nurse:
"At 11-11.30am [on Friday 15 August] IS
militants called all the residents to the secondary school, which has been
their headquarters since they came to the village two weeks ago. There they
asked that we hand over our money and our mobile phones, and that the women
hand over their jewellery.
After about 15 minutes they brought vehicles and started to
fill them up with men and boys. They pushed about 20 of us onto the back of a
Kia pick-up vehicle and drove us about one kilometre east of the village. They
got us off the vehicle by the pool and made us crouch on the ground in a tight
cluster and one of them photographed us. I thought then they’d let us go after
that, but they opened fire at us from behind. I was hit in the left knee, but
the bullet only grazed my knee. I let myself fall forward, as if I were dead,
and I stayed there face down without moving. When the shooting stopped I
kept still and after they left, I ran away."
Here is an excerpt from
another survivor, a 32 year old shop owner:
"I was still thinking that they were going to
take us to the mountain as had been promised. About four vehicles left, two at
a time. Then I was put in a vehicle with about 20 other men. We stopped near
the last house on the edge of the village and they got us off the vehicle,
I knew that they were going to kill us as this was not the way to the
mountain. We were on the edge of a hill and as I looked down I saw a group of
bodies below by the wadi.
“They told us to stand in line and one of the men in our
group, the son of the Sheikh, told them ‘this is not what was agreed; you were
going to take us to the mountain’. They shot him multiple times. We threw
ourselves to the ground and they shot at us for several minutes and then they
left. I was shot three times, twice in the left arm and once in the left hip.
After they left, another man, Nadir Ibrahim and I got up. All the others were
dead or dying.
This survivor has been
unable to locate seven of his brothers, aged between 22 and 41, since the day
of the shooting.
Many of the men and boys
taken to be shot were only wounded during the IS-led violence and lay suffering
after being left for dead as described here:
“Some could not move and could not save themselves; they lay in agony
waiting to die. They died a horrible death. I managed to drag myself away and
was saved by a Muslim neighbour; he risked his life to save me; he is more than
a brother to me. For 12 days he brought me food and water every night. I could
not walk and had no hope of getting away and it was becoming increasingly
dangerous for him to continue to keep me there. He gave me a phone so that I
could speak with my relatives (in the mountain and in Kurdistan) and after 12
days he managed to get me a donkey so that I could ride to the mountain, and
from there I was evacuated through Syria and on to Kurdistan.”
In addition to the
massacres in Qiniyeh and Kocho/Kuju, IS fighters are believed to have killed
additional families in Jdali.
On top of the massacres/ethnic
cleansing, IS has undertaken mass abductions of Yezedi women and children.
In one case, 18 women and children from four generations of a family were
abducted on August 3, 2014 and their whereabouts is unknown. Hundreds of
the abducted women and children have been relocated to Tal 'Afar where they are
being held in houses that were abandoned by their Shi'a owners. There are
also allegations that many of the women and girls who have been abducted by IS
fighters have been subjected to sexual abuse including rape and that some have
been sold as slaves or forced to marry IS fighters.
While there is no doubt
that the Islamic State is doing all that it can to terrorize the United States
and Europe through the release of their execution videos, the impact of their
version of ethnic cleansing on innocent Iraqi minorities is just as horrifying
and impacts tens of thousands of lives.
Hopefully the Evil that ISIS has shown will cause the regional powers to band together and fight against ISIS. But the US needs to only help we can be the main driving force behind everything. They(inhabits of the area) need to want it and to step up and take control of the citation. The US cannot keep doing everything.
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