Women and girls from Iraq’s Yazidi minority endured horrors at the hands of Islamic State (IS) group extremists after they were taken as slaves last summer, leaving them deeply traumatized, an international watchdog group said in a report issued yesterday.
The Amnesty International report was based on interviews with more than 40 former captives who were among hundreds of women and girls from the Yazidi religious minority captured by Islamic State fighters in early August when the militants overran their hometown of Sinjar, Iraq.
Hundreds were killed in the attack, and tens of thousands were either stranded in nearby Mount Sinjar or fled mostly to the Kurdish-held parts of northern Iraq.
The London-based group said the captives, including girls aged 10 to 12, faced torture, rape, forced marriage and were “sold” or given as “gifts” to Islamic State fighters or their supporters in militant-held areas in Iraq and Syria.
“Hundreds of Yazidi women and girls have had their lives shattered by the horrors of sexual violence and sexual slavery in IS captivity,” Amnesty’s senior crisis response adviser Donatella Rovera said in a statement.
“Many of those held as sexual slaves are children — girls aged 14, 15 or even younger,” Rovera added.
Fearful of rape, some captives committed suicide — like 19-year old Jilan, according to her brother and one of the 20 girls who were with her.
“One day we were given clothes that looked like dance costumes and were told to bathe and wear those clothes,” the girl was quoted in the report as saying.
“Jilan killed herself in the bathroom. She cut her wrists and hanged herself. She was very beautiful; I think she knew she was going to be taken away by a man and that is why she killed herself,” added the girl who was among those who later escaped.
The Yazidis are a centuries-old religious minority viewed as apostates by extremists in Iraq. They have suffered religious persecution for generations because of their beliefs, which include some elements similar to Christianity, Judaism and other ancient religions. Many Muslims consider them devil worshippers, an accusation that Yazidis dispute.
The June onslaught by the Islamic State group, formerly known as the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, stunned Iraqi security forces and the military, which melted away and withdrew as the extremists advanced, capturing key cities and towns in the country’s north. The militants targeted Iraq’s indigenous religious minorities, including Christians and Yazidis, forcing tens of thousands from their homes.
Since then, the Islamic State has carved out a self-styled caliphate in the large area straddling the Iraqi-Syrian border that it now controls.
The US launched airstrikes in early August on the militant-held areas in Iraq, in an effort to help the Iraqi forces fight back against the growing militant threat. Since then, some progress has been made on the ground by government forces, Kurdish fighters and Shiite militias.
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