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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 » Mon Oct 10, 2022 10:40 pm

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Newly constructed gate of Lalish

Duhok (Kurdistan 24) – A newly constructed entrance gate has been opened at the Yezidis holy temple coinciding with the Yezidis celebration of the Jama feast

Yezidi Prince Mir Hazim Tahseen Beg and Yezidi spiritual leader Baba Sheikh along with Duhok governor Ali Tatar opened the external gate that leads into Lalish.

Located in a valley in the Shekhan district of Duhok province, is the holiest temple of Yezidis known as Lalish and it is the temple Yezidis pilgrimage to from all over the world.

Khalid Narmo, an engineer of the renovation of Lalish said that the cost of the gate construction was 180 million Iraqi dinars allocated by Kurdistan regional government.

On the gate, Yezidis important signs like the sun have been used and other Yezidis symbols have been taken into consideration in the construction of the gate.

Narmo stated that 65 other projects that include the construction and renovation of temples, shrines, and other important sites of Yezidis will be implemented.

Over 30% of the Lalish renovation project has been implemented based on the original construction and architecture of the temple.’ He added.

A double-sided road that leads to Lalish was also opened.

The Collective Feast (Jama) is considered one of the holidays in the Yezidi religion, which falls at the beginning of the month of October and lasts for seven days, during which different religious ceremonies are observed.

Yazidis ascend the mountain surrounding the shrine of Sheikh Adi in Lalish, celebrating this day and returning from the mountain.

This year too, many Yezidis gathered at Lalish in traditional Yezidi clothes.

Duhok governor in a speech at the opening of the gate at Lalish wished that Jama holidays bring happiness to Yezidis and all people living in the Kurdistan region.

This coexistence of all ethnic and religious components in Kurdistan region is our main principle that will continue to get stronger,’ He said.

He furthermore described the newly constructed gate as a Yezidis architectural symbol.

He reiterated that more projects will continue to be implemented for Lalish as an important Yezidis temple, at the same time preserving its sacred, architectural, and historical symbols and place.

Separately, Mir Hazim Tahseen Beg extended his congratulation to Yezidis in the Kurdistan region, Iraq, and all the world, wishing unity in the region.

Khalaf Simo, who was in traditional Yezids clothes at Lalish, told Kurdistan 24 that in spite of 74 genocides against Yezidis, the religion and culture of Yezidis survived.

In this sacred place and on this holy day I wanted to reaffirm this by wearing these cultural clothes.

https://www.kurdistan24.net/en/story/29 ... of-Yezidis
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Oct 19, 2022 12:39 am

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Car explosion in Shingal

An explosive vehicle targeted a local security force in Shingal, affiliated to the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK), late Tuesday, injuring four people, including civilians

News media reported that an explosive vehicle passed a checkpoint controlled by the Iraqi army, entering Shingal in mid-Tuesday. Yazidkhan Asayesh chased the vehicle but it exploded when the PKK-affiliated force found and approached it.

Two members of the Kurdish force and two civilians were injured in the incident. They were transported to Shingal and Mosul hospitals, according to the outlet.

Erbil-based Kurdish counterterrorism forces said it was a “Turkish” drone attack, adding that two PKK fighters were killed and another was injured.

Ankara occasionally carries out such attacks against PKK-affiliated forces in Shingal where several armed forces affiliated with the Iraqi government, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), and the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) are also present.

PKK is an armed group fighting for the freedom of Kurds in Turkey. The group is designated a terrorist organization by Ankara, which carries out regular military campaigns against the group at home and in northern Iraq, including in the Kurdistan Region.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/181020221
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Oct 20, 2022 9:21 pm

Shengal Culture and Art Festival

There is a starting point for every living thing in the entire universe. From this starting point, existence is maintained, power, strength and mobility originate. This is also true for societies and faiths. There is always a starting point to promote goodness, to ensure freedom and peace, to bring art to life and to experience all forms of beauty

Like all societies, there is a starting point for the Yazidi community. Their starting point is to worship the Sun. Today, Yazidis have prayed to the Sun with a purity of mind and heart.

The Yazidis flocked to the Çilmera area of ​​Shengal before the sunrise in the morning and gathered around the holy Qub in their white clothes. Raising their hands in the cool breeze, they prayed with their hopes and expectations. All said the Sun Prayer.

The Culture and Art Festival was held for the first time in the sacred land of Êzidxan. The Shengal Culture and Art Festival started with the Sun Prayer. Many people flocked to Chilmera Qub to participate in this sacred prayer ritual. Prayers were generally said for freedom and peace.

After the prayer came the halay dance, which is considered a religious ritual within the Yazidi community. Those who join arms during the halay dance are taken for spiritual brothers and sisters.

After the holy prayer and halay ritual on the Chilmera hill in Shengal, dengbêjs (singing storytellers) performed songs.

Afterwards, a traditional breakfast was offered at the Serdesht Culture and Art Center in the Serdesht area of ​​Shengal.

The festival will last for 3 days with various activities.
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Thu Oct 27, 2022 6:57 pm

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Yazidi minor rescued from Hol Camp

The Yazidi House in the Cizre Region delivered a Yazidi teen named Canê Ziyad Heyder (15) to Shengal in an official ceremony after she was rescued from the Hol Camp by the Internal Security Forces

Ziyad Heyder was born in the village of Solax in Shengal. She has been living in the 6th section of the Hol Camp since 2019 after she was kidnapped by ISIS from her hometown.

'UNTIL EVERYONE IS FREED...'

Spokeswoman Rûksen Mihemed addressed the massacres against the Yazidis in her speech during the ceremony.

“After the 74 massacres committed against the Yazidis, the people of Shengal and the Shengal Resistance Units have been able to frustrate the genocidal plans and attacks,” she said.

The Yazidis’ commitment to protect their people, region and culture is stronger than all the attacks of ISIS. She added that they would continue their struggle and efforts until all Yazidi women kidnapped by ISIS are freed.

Omer Şengalî thanked all the military forces in the region for their efforts, adding, “The Yazidi community will continue to resist despite all the pain they have suffered."

THREE YAZIDI WOMEN FREED IN A MONTH

Yazidi House member Nalîn Reşo thanked all military forces, thanks to whom, she said, three kidnapped Yazidi women have been freed in a month.

After the speeches, Canê Ziyad Heydar was handed over to reunite with her family.

Recently two more Yazidi women, Sewsen Hesen Heyder (24) and Wefa Elî Ebas (18) during the second phase of the Operation Humanity and Security launched against the ISIS remnants in the Hol Camp.
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sun Oct 30, 2022 3:18 am

Digital art archive helps community rebuild

The traditions and art of women survivors of the Yazidi genocide have been collected into a group of archives, hosted by the United Nations (UN) on the Google Arts & Culture platform. The result of a year-long series of workshops in northern Iraq, the Yazidi Cultural Archives

The aim is not simply to document the traditions of the small ethnic minority. Crucially, they address the mental-health crisis now gripping the Yazidi community, which has manifested itself in high rates of depression, post-traumatic stress disorder and suicide.

The Yazidi Cultural Archives is launching today at the headquarters of the Iraq-based NGO, Yazda—a lead partner in the project—in Duhok, Iraq and at the Institut du Monde Arabe in Paris. Available in English and Arabic, they comprise four permanent online exhibitions of works, photography and films created by 16 female Yazidi survivors.

In 2014 the Yazidis living in Iraq were targeted by Islamic State, in what the UN and other governments have recognised as a genocide. According to the UN, in August 2014, Isis killed 5,000 Yazidi men and kidnapped 7,000 Yazidi women and girls. Around 50% of the Yazidi community was displaced, or around 360,000 people in total. Around 200,000 Yazidis remain in camps today.

NGO Yazda held painting and photography workshops for women survivors; their art was used to create four permanent online exhibitions © Yazidi Cultural Archives

“The project builds on research that was done in Rwanda after the genocide, which found that archiving plays a role in addressing mental health recovery,” explains George Richards, the director of Community Jameel, one of the partners on the initiative.

“Where the community feels that their cultural identity is at risk, and then they suffer something as traumatic and devastating as genocide, the archiving of their heritage provides recognition of their cultural identity. And that in itself helps to strengthen the recovery of the community from the genocide, because they know that they are being seen, as we would say nowadays.”

Link to Full Article - Photos:

https://www.theartnewspaper.com/2022/10 ... r-genocide
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Nov 04, 2022 2:46 am

Turkish drone kills at least one

At least one person was killed in Shingal on Thursday after a suspected Turkish drone targeted a pickup vehicle, Kurdish counterterrorism forces and media affiliated to the local forces reported

“As a result of a Turkish drone attack against a vehicle of PKK fighters in Shingal, a fighter was killed and two others were injured,” said the Erbil-based counterterrorism forces on Facebook.

Rojnews, a media outlet affiliated to the PKK, also reported the drone attack, blaming Turkey. It added that one person, Muhsin Shami, was killed and another was injured.

Luqman Glee, head of Peshmerga forces’ operations in Shingal, told Rudaw that there were two attacks, with one targeting a pickup which led to the death of four PKK fighters who were in the vehicle. However, he said details on the second attack were not clear.

Ankara occasionally carries out such attacks against PKK-affiliated forces in Shingal where several armed forces affiliated with the Iraqi government, the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG), and the Popular Mobilization Forces (PMF) are also present.

PKK is an armed group fighting for the increased rights of Kurds in Turkey. The group is designated a terrorist organization by Ankara, which carries out regular military campaigns against the group at home and in northern Iraq, including in the Kurdistan Region.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/middleeast/iraq/031120221
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Nov 05, 2022 12:50 am

Women’s liberation from ISIS

Letters from Sinjar (Nameyên ji Şengalê), a film framing the pain, hope, struggles and resistance of Yazidi women in Sinjar (Şengal) during ISIS’s occupation of the city and after the liberation, will be screened on 13 November, reported Jin News Agency

The documentary including six episodes, in each of which a letter is read, has been directed by Dersîm Zêrevan.

Safînaz Evdiko, the producer and a member of the Rojava Film Commune, said that the film is to be screened in Qamishlo, a city in northern Syria, on 13 November, the anniversary of the liberation of Sinjar.

“Sinjar has been liberated by Kurdish freedom fighters and we have used it in some real scenes in our movie. These six letters are made up of lived stories and experiences,” Evdiko said.

“We want the story of genocide and liberation not to be forgotten. The people of Sinjar have survived and resisted despite 74 genocides and we want to show a short section of this resistance with our film,” she added.

Rozan Mistefa, the leading actor, explained that she played a female warrior in the film, which narrates the liberation movement that emerged after the occupation and the process of clearing the city completely of ISIS.

The ISIS attacks against Yazidis in the Sinjar region of northern Iraq started on 3 August 2014. ISIS overran the Yazidi land, forcing young women into sexual and domestic servitude for ISIS fighters, massacring thousands of people and displacing Yazidis in the area. ISIS was removed from the area on 13 November 2015. In 2016 an independent UN commission of inquiry recognised the massacres as genocide.

In the case of a Yazidi woman who spoke earlier, known only as S.H., the 27-year-old described how she disfigured her own face in order not to be ‘picked out’ and selected by ISIS members, after experiencing gruesome violence at the hands of ISIS.

The movie was also screened at the London Kurdish Film Festival.

https://medyanews.net/new-movie-reflect ... from-isis/
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Nov 08, 2022 11:37 pm

Turkey attacking Shengal for 5 years

The invading Turkish state has attacked Shengal dozens of times since 2017. Military and civilian leaders of the Yazidi community, as well as civilian citizens, have been killed in the ongoing attacks

The Turkish state is continuing its massacre attacks launched first with the help of ISIS on 3 August 2014. As a result of the attacks, Naze Nayif, a member of the Yazidi Women's Freedom Movement (TAJÊ), 7 fighters affiliated to the Shengal Resistance Units (YBŞ) and People's Defence Forces (HPG) were killed. Moreover, journalist Nûjiyan Erhan, a representative of the Free Press tradition, who exposed the Shengal Massacre to the world, was seriously injured in the same attack and died on 22 March.

TURKISH ATTACKS

The first Turkish airstrike against Shengal, which is 170 km away from Turkey, was carried out on 25 April 2017. On the same day, the Turkish army attacked the YPG General Command headquarters on Qereçox Mountain in Rojava and killed 20 YPG and YPJ fighters. In an attack on Shengal, a civilian was killed and a YBŞ fighter was injured. Plus, the Çira Radio building completely collapsed, and the city's park was seriously damaged because of the attacks.

YAZIDI LEADERS TARGETED

In its second attack, the Turkish state targeted Yazidi Community Coordination Member Mam Zeki Şengalî, who was returning from a commemoration ceremony for the Koço Massacre martyrs in the Şilo Valley region on 15 August 2018. Mam Zeki was martyred in the attack, while YBŞ fighter Mahir Serhed, who was seriously injured, died two weeks later.

ATTACKS BECAME PERMANENT

Thereafter, the attacks of the Turkish state became permanent. Three workers who came from Kobanê to dig a well in Shengal became the victims of a Turkish air strike on 13 December 2019. In November 2019, Turkish drones attacked the town of Xanesor, which left 6 YBŞ fighters dead.

ASSASSINATION OF YBŞ TOP COMMANDER

Turkish drones targeted a top YBŞ Commander, Zerdeşt Şengalî in Digur village of Sinunê district of Shengal at 10.30am on 15 January2020. Şengalî and YBŞ fighters Şervan Cilo and Êzdîn Şengali were killed and one person was injured.

TURKISH FORCES HIT HOSPITAL

Along with the attacks on the Martyr Rustem Cûdî (Maxmûr) Refugee Camp and the Medya Defence Zones on 15 June 2020, a hospital in the Serdeşt village and some places around Shengal Mountain were bombed.

ATTACK ON SERDESH CAMP

On 30 June the same year, the Yazidis in the Serdeşt Camp, who survived the Shengal Massacre, took refuge in the Shengal Mountain and took part in Shengal's liberation campaign, were targeted.

DRONE ATTACK ON VILLAGES OF XANESOR

On 23-25 ​​August 2020, several points in the Shengal Mountain were once again bombed simultaneously with the attacks on the Medya Defence Zones. The attacks continued on 26 August. A car was hit by Turkish drones in the village of Behrava in Xanesor, which killed two people. There were no casualties in the attack on the village of Barê. Barê was once again targeted by drones on 9 November. The attacks left a YBŞ fighter and a civilian martyred and two others injured.

ASSASSINATION OF SEID HESEN

The Turkish state targeted the vehicle of YBŞ Commander Seîd Hesen Seîd in the old bazaar in Shengal downtown at noon on 16 August 2021. Seîd Hesen Seîd and his nephew, who was a YBŞ fighter, Îsa Xweda were killed, and three other people were injured.

HOSPITAL IN SIKINIYÊ HIT

The next day, the Turkish state targeted a civilian hospital in the village of Sikiniyê. Turkish drones and fighter jets killed 8 people in the hospital. The hospital completely collapsed. Muxlis Sidar, who was killed during the attack, was one of the doctors without borders who came to Shengal from North Kurdistan (Turkey’s south-east) in 2014 to heal the Yazidis.

ASSASSINATION OF ASSEMBLY CO-CHAIR

Turkish drones targeted the vehicle of Shengal Democratic Autonomous Administration Executive Council Co-Chair Merwan Bedel on 7 December 2021. Following the attack, Bedel was martyred and his two children in the vehicle were injured.

Four days after this attack, Turkish forces bombed the People's Assembly headquarters in the Xanesor district of Shengal, causing material damage.

5 HOUR-LONG AIR STRIKE

The Turkish state did not stop its attacks in 2022 either. Turkish drones hit a vehicle in Shengal's Şilo Valley. Azad Êzdîn, a YBŞ Commander, and Enwer Tolhildan, a YBŞ fighter, were killed. Turkish fighter jets bombed Amûd and Çilmera regions, which are the strategic points of the Shengal Mountain, at 10pm on 1 February. However, there were no casualties in this air strike, which lasted about 5 hours.

12-YEAR-OLD TEEN KILLED

On 15 June, Turkish drones attacked the People's Assembly headquarters in the Sinunê district of Shengal and its vicinity. 12-year-old Selah Naso was killed, and 8 citizens were injured.

KAZIMI FORCES ALSO ATTACKED

In parallel with the new invasion attacks by the Turkish state in the Medya Defence Areas in April, Iraqi forces affiliated with the Kazimi government also attempted to enter Shengal. The Kazimi forces began to attack Yazidi Security Forces headquarters and the village of Digurê in Sinunê on 2 May. Yazidi Security Forces, especially the YBŞ and the YJŞ forces, resisted these attacks and were forced to retreat. During the battle, YBŞ fighter Şervan Êzîdxan and YJŞ fighter Feraşin Şengalî were killed.

CONTINUOUS RECONNAISSANCE FLIGHTS OVER SHENGAL

Turkish drones carried out attacks uninterruptedly against Shengal after 24 August 2022. On 29 August 2022, a vehicle that carried two YBŞ fighters was targeted between Xanesor sub-district and the village of Barê, and two fighters were injured.

Turkish drones targeted a vehicle of the YBŞ forces in the village of Behreva in Xanesor on 11 September; no casualties were reported.

The town of Til Ezer, known for its resistance against ISIS, was also attacked on 23 September, yet no casualties were reported.

The Serdesht Camp was targeted once again on 6 October. No casualties were reported in the attack.

On 28 October, a civilian vehicle that parked around Shengal's Cidale control centre was bombed. The next day, a house in the Xanesor district was bombed. No casualties were reported in these attacks.

HOLY PLACES ALSO TARGETED

On the first day of November, Turkish forces targeted the Hesin Meman Dome, one of the holy places of the Yazidi people, located in Shengal downtown. No casualties were reported, but the dome was damaged.

ONE MORE CIVILIAN CASUALTY IN A RECENT ATTACK

On 3 November, Turkish forces targeted a civilian vehicle on the move in the El Nasir District, one of the old neighbourhoods where the YBŞ and HPG guerrillas carried out the Shengal resistance for 11 months. A civilian named Mihsin Şemo was killed and the woman in the vehicle was injured.
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Nov 12, 2022 2:50 am

Luxembourg recognizes genocide

Masrour Barzani on Friday welcomed the decision of the Luxembourg parliament to recognize the 2014 crimes committed by the Islamic State (ISIS) against the Yazidi community in Iraq as genocide, vowing to strengthen efforts to reunite the religious minority and to hold the militant group accountable

The Luxembourg parliament on Thursday unanimously voted to recognize the atrocities of ISIS against the Yazidi people as genocide, joining the ranks of the United States, Belgium, Canada, and the Netherlands that have already done so.

“This declaration helps bring a greater sense of accountability for a community longing for security and the return of their ancestral homeland,” PM Barzani said in a tweet on Friday.

The Kurdish premier stressed the need to strengthen efforts to reunite the Yazidi community and support the displaced families, as well as renewing calls for implementing the Shingal agreement.

    As we mourn as a nation still for what was lost during the recent ferman, we’ll strengthen our efforts to reunite every Yazidi with their community and bring perpetrators to justice; support displaced families, and continue to call for the normalization of Sinjar. #YazidiGenocide
    — Masrour Barzani (@masrourbarzani) November 11, 2022
The Iraqi federal government and the Kurdistan Regional Government (KRG) signed an agreement in 2020 to “normalize” the situation in Shingal, and resolve a number of issues preventing its displaced people from returning to the area.

Under the Erbil-Baghdad agreement, security for the troubled region would be Baghdad's responsibility. The federal government will have to establish a new armed force recruited from the local population and expel fighters from the Kurdistan Workers’ Party (PKK) and their affiliated groups.

ISIS swept across Iraq and Syria in the summer of 2014. Minority groups especially suffered under the terror group's rule, including Yazidis, Shabaks, and Christians.

More than 6,000 Yazidis were kidnapped when ISIS attacked their heartland of Shingal in Nineveh province, according to the KRG Office for Rescuing Kidnapped Yazidis. Over 2,000 remain missing.

The United Nations Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Daesh/ISIL in Iraq and the Levant (UNITAD) stated in May 2021 that they had established “clear and convincing evidence” that ISIS had committed genocide against the Yazidis.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/kurdistan/111120221
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Mon Nov 14, 2022 2:50 am

After 8 years, sisters reunion with brother

After spending years pleading with the federal government to expedite their brother's application to come to Canada, Layla and Amal Alhussein have finally reunited with their 13-year-old brother, Ayad

The Yazidi family embraced Thursday on the "hug rug" that greets people arriving at the Winnipeg airport, with Layla and Amal taking turns hugging their brother and giving him flowers to welcome him to his new home.

"It still feels like a dream. It doesn't really feel real yet," Ayad, 13, said upon his arrival.

The last time Layla and Amal saw their brother was in Iraq, where their entire family was captured by ISIS in August 2014.

The sisters came to Canada in 2018 as refugees through the federal government's 2017 commitment to settle 1,200 Yazidi refugees and ISIS survivors.

Yazidis, a religious minority based mainly in northern Iraq, were persecuted by the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, who considered them heretics. In 2016, a United Nations report declared that the slaughter, sexual slavery, indoctrination and other crimes committed against the 400,000 Yazidi amounted to genocide.

When they arrived in Canada, Layla and Amal thought most of their other family members — including Ayad — were dead, except for one sister who stayed behind in a refugee camp in Iraq.

It wasn't until 2020 that they learned through that sister that Ayad, then 10 years old, was alive and living in the refugee camp. He had been rescued after five years in ISIS captivity.

Since then, Layla and Amal had been desperately trying to expedite his approval to come to Canada through the federal government's one-year window program, which allows a family member to come to the country as a dependent of a permanent resident who has arrived as a refugee within the past year.

Layla previously told CBC News she had filed an application in January 2020 to sponsor Ayad to come to Canada, but said she didn't hear from the government after that.

Earlier this year, the federal immigration department told CBC it is committed to reuniting families, but could not offer a timeline for processing this type of application.

Nafiya Naso, who works with the Canadian Yazidi Association, said shortly after CBC published a story in early June about Ayad and his sisters, the family was contacted by Immigration, Refugees and Citizenship Canada.

A bittersweet moment

After Layla and Amal greeted their brother on Thursday, other members from the Yazidi community in Winnipeg took turns welcoming him to the city. Volunteers from Yazidi-serving organizations, like Operation Ezra and the Canadian Yazidi Association, were also at the airport.

Amal said she'd be cooking traditional dishes Thursday night in celebration of her brother's arrival, which Ayad said he was looking forward to.

"I'm excited to eat a home-cooked meal by my sisters," he said.

Although Layla and Amal are celebrating their reunion with Ayad, it's a bittersweet moment. The family still doesn't know what happened to their parents or four other siblings, whom they haven't seen since 2014.

Michel Aziza, the co-founder and chair of Operation Ezra, said it's nearly impossible for people to settle in new countries and transition into a life of normalcy when their family members are still missing.

He hopes Canadians keep advocating for the government to reunite more Yazidi families with their relatives who are still in refugee camps.

He encourages people in Canada to reach out to their members of Parliament, and keep pressing the federal immigration department to process family reunification applications.

"Ayad's sisters are the example of that. For [two] years, they have constantly been knocking on doors," said Aziza.

Never give up

Link to Article - Photos:
https://www.cbc.ca/news/canada/manitoba ... -1.6647835
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Nov 15, 2022 9:57 pm

Pope vows to help Yazidis

VATICAN CITY, Vatican - Upon an official invitation, Yazidi Leader Mir Hazim Tahsin Beg met with Pope Francis in the Vatican on Monday to discuss international efforts to pressure the Iraqi government to pave the way for the return of people who have fled their homes due to the Islamic State (ISIS) attack

In a meeting that lasted 40 minutes, Mir Hazim and his wife Mayan Khairy Saeed Beg briefed Pope Francis about the current situation of Yazidis in displacement and exile, Shingal, and the Kurdistan Region.

"We will do our best and spare no efforts to assist you," Mir Hazim quoted Pope Francis as saying during their gathering.

"We will put pressure on the international community and they will put pressure on Iraq in order to resolve the problems of Shingal," Mir Hazim continued to quote Pope Francis as saying.

ISIS attacked the Yazidi heartland of Shingal in 2014, killing and kidnapping thousands of people. Thousands of others fled to the Kurdistan Region and northeast Syria (Rojava).

A large number of Yazidis who were held hostage by ISIS have been rescued - thanks to an office established by the Kurdistan Region President Nechirvan Barzani.

Hazim Tahsin Beg, the eldest son of the late Yezidi Mir Tahsin Beg, was appointed chief of the Yezidi community in late July 2019. Mir Tahsin passed away at a Hanover hospital in Germany in January.

Poverty, instability, and unemployment have driven a large number of Yazidis to take illegal and dangerous routes to Europe in recent months

There are currently plenty of Yazidis stranded in Greece with the numbers keep getting higher.

Greece is a key route used by refugees and migrants as an entry point into the European Union.

The lack of job opportunities and security are the main reasons driving civilians to leave Shingal, a Yazidi migrant stuck in Greek territories said.

More than 4,300 Yazidis migrated out of Shingal and Duhok camps between August and September, Sherzad Pirmusa, head of the Duhok-based Alind Organization for Youth Democratization said at the beginning of September.

For her part, the wife of the Yazidi leader, Mayan Khairy said Pope Francis vowed to follow up on the fate of Yazidis stranded in Greece and Turkey and living in misery.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/world/151120221
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Sat Dec 03, 2022 11:26 am

Preserving an ancient culture

Malaeen Luqman was 13 years old when Islamic State militants kidnapped her family in a coordinated attack on the Yazidi homeland of Iraq’s Mount Sinjar in 2014. Separated from her mother and taken to Raqqa in Syria, she managed to escape to Turkey after 12 weeks of captivity

Today, Malaeen is one of 16 women survivors scattered across camps in northern Iraq who are documenting the experiences and customs of the Yazidi people on camera, canvas and film to create a digital cultural archive. It is one of many initiatives to safeguard this fragile minority’s identity since Islamic State jihadis tried to erase their heritage by mass murder, sexual enslavement and the destruction of historic shrines and villages


Considered heretics by the jihadis, 5,000 Yazidi civilians were killed when they refused to accept forced conversion following the onslaught. Some 2,700 Yazidi women and children remain unaccounted for. Though estimates vary, it is thought that Iraqi Yazidis numbered more than 600,000 when Islamic State embarked on what United Nations investigators have described as genocide. 

Up to 40 per cent of Yazidis fled abroad. More than 200,000 are displaced and weary of living in displacement camps around Dohuk in northern Iraq. If they seek asylum in the West, the fear is that the memories and practices central to their culture and religion will disappear as well.

This esoteric peacock-worshipping sect has no holy book, and its sacred scriptures are passed on orally by a priestly caste of sheikhs. Yazidis do not accept religious converts and many elders have opposed writing oral traditions down or putting them online. Their syncretic faith combines elements of Zoroastrianism, Christianity and Islam, but as Gerard Russell remarks in his book Heirs to Forgotten Kingdoms: ‘The religion’s secrets have been kept well, even from its own followers.’

Young Yazidis’ urgent need to record their culture 

However, Islamic State’s campaign of mass killings and kidnappings has convinced young Yazidi activists of the need to document their endangered belief system and to record their distinct oral history.

The year-long cultural archive project, with the support of Community Jameel and led by Yazda, a Yazidi organization that champions religious minority groups, also aids the psychological recovery of girls such as Malaeen, says Nisha Sajnani, director of arts and health at New York University, who was an adviser to the programme.

The workshops and field trips help them to reconnect with themselves and to support one another. Participants chose their own subject matter, as having a choice matters to girls who were stripped of all their power when imprisoned. Art provides a way of expressing what they feel internally, Sajnani says: ‘By making the invisible visible and the intangible tangible they can compartmentalise their experience.’ 

For Malaeen, her drawing of a female face as a blur of grey and blue represents the intensity of the pain experienced by women. ‘I was a child when they captured me, I became an old woman after three months,’ she said. ‘I draw because I want people to know how my life was in captivity. It felt good expressing myself as I couldn’t speak.’

Yazidis forbid marriage outside the community and sexual contact with a non-believer means banishment. But after the 2014 attacks, the Baba Sheikh, the Yazidis’ religious leader, devised a new ritual for formerly enslaved women. 

At the religion’s most important pilgrimage site, the Lalish Temple north of Mosul, these returnees are showered with holy water from a sacred spring. Afterwards they are considered ‘pure’ again in the eyes of their people and are welcomed back. ‘This was an incredibly radical move,’ says Christine Robbins, professor of Kurdish studies at Exeter University. ‘It is a sign that one of the world’s oldest religions can adapt to the modern era.’

This ceremony was captured in a film about Lalish made by survivors as part of the archive, which is available on the Google Arts & Culture platform. In another scene, a religious musician, known as a qewal, sings a haunting song from the temple walls. These Yazidi hymns passed orally from one generation to the next, with musicians learning up to 500 pieces. The Amar Foundation, a British charity, has been recording and cataloguing this ancient music.

Traditional folk songs are being kept alive by a group of Yazidi girls, who set up a choir in a refugee camp. Many were abducted by Islamic State and singing offers an escape from the memories that haunt them. The songs are of love and loss and tragic heroism. The sacred recordings are being archived at the Bodleian Library in Oxford, and the Mosul and Dohuk libraries in Iraq. More songs are being notated to form a written canon for the first time.

Nadia Murad, a Yazidi who was co-winner of the 2018 Nobel Peace Prize at the age of 25, believes that empowering Yazidis to celebrate their heritage and providing safe spaces to practise their religion is crucial to counter the consequences of genocide. Many Yazidi women, who were sold and married to Islamic State fighters, were forced to convert to Islam. ‘They violated our religion in addition to our bodies,’ Murad told me. 

Her charity, Nadia’s Initiative, has restored three destroyed Yazidi temples, whose cone-shaped roofs represent rays of the sun shining on the Earth, to rebuild social cohesion. Families can attend holy days and festivals which reinforce a sense of belonging. Murad added: ‘It is healing to know that our heritage will be preserved for the future.’

Nobel Prize-winner Nadia Murad with images of Yazidis who are still missing or who were killed by Islamic State (Credit: Nadia’s Initiative)

The Yazidi diaspora

Until recently, no temples were built outside Iraq but the Islamic State atrocities galvanized the Yazidi diaspora in the Caucasus to create their own places of worship. In the Armenian village of Aknalich, in sight of Mount Ararat, now stands the largest Yazidi temple in the world. A Yazidi-Armenian businessman paid for the white-spired building, which was finished in 2019. 

In Georgia, the Yazidi community has shrunk to a fifth of its previous size due to emigration. Those who remain fear their culture is being diluted by a slow but steady assimilation into Georgian society. It is hoped a recently built temple, which nestles between Soviet-era tower blocks on the outskirts of the capital Tbilisi, will help safeguard the faith’s identity, along with the first Yazidi theology degree course being offered at an associated academy nearby. 

As part of another initiative, in the sprawling tent cities of Iraq a group of young poets, musicians and filmmakers have spent the past year interviewing elderly inhabitants. Each family used to have a storyteller, usually a grandparent, who would perform songs, recite folklore tales and act as a custodian of family history.

They speak of village life, sheep being attacked by wolves and even a bear, and the pain of being forced to move into towns by the Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein. This oral history will all be archived online so Yazidis around the world can use it as a collective memory. 

The Yazidis say that over the centuries, they have survived 74 attempts to wipe them out. Malaeen found painting her experience and documenting her culture to be empowering.  ‘It helped me to remember who I am and who my people are,’ she says. ‘Yazidi women are not weak. I want other people to know that we are back and stronger than before.’

Link to Article - Photos - Video:
https://www.chathamhouse.org/publicatio ... t-genocide
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Fri Dec 09, 2022 12:13 pm

How Can US Help
by Abid Shamdeen

It has been more than eight years since the Islamic State (ISIS) destroyed Sinjar, and the area remains devastated today. I visited Sinjar – my home – just weeks ago and was once again confronted by the realities of a destabilized community that has gone nearly a decade without substantial investments in its recovery. It desperately needs international support

In the early 2000s, I served as a translator and cultural advisor to the U.S. military in Iraq. I am proud of my service, as are many other members of my Yazidi community. In addition to working as cultural liaisons, Yazidis served as security guards, cooks, cleaners, and mechanics on U.S. bases throughout the region. I had the opportunity to see and be part of the essential support that kept American military personnel safe. We helped them identify safe routes and we watched for warning signs that signaled when they needed to get out. Ultimately, we made sure they got home to their families safely.

By the time the United States withdrew from Iraq in 2010, hundreds of Yazidis had been actively supporting U.S. military operations despite knowing that this association put us and our families at immense risk. Because of my service, I was given the opportunity to relocate to the United States and attend the University of Nebraska. But the majority of Yazidis and other minority groups who served vital roles supporting the U.S. occupation were not so lucky.

The 2014 Yazidi Genocide

While in Nebraska, I watched as my Yazidi community in Iraq became more and more vulnerable, due to a rise in hate speech and disinformation, along with ongoing targeted religious persecution. In the power vacuum left by the U.S. withdrawal, resources for supporting minorities were removed, and marginalized communities were left with little protection.

This power vacuum made room for the rise of terrorist groups like ISIS who were intent on destabilizing Iraq even further through the destruction of lands and the ethnic cleansing of minority groups. Soon, Yazidis there who had also served the U.S. military were targeted by radical groups because they had aided the Americans.

The combination of weakened security left by the U.S. intervention and years of targeted discrimination by the Iraqi government left Yazidis vulnerable to annihilation when ISIS began a genocide against the community in 2014.

Aftermath of the Genocide

Since the atrocities began, the U.S. has been sympathetic to the Yazidi cause, delivering emergency aid to Yazidis trapped on top of Mount Sinjar in the early days of the ISIS attacks and speaking out as one of the first major powers to officially recognize the actions of ISIS as genocide.

The United States also quickly assembled and led the global coalition to defeat ISIS. But the violence against the Yazidi people did not end when Sinjar was liberated.

In recent years, the political will to stabilize Iraq has drastically waned, as attention has turned to security threats in other parts of the world. The U.S. government is no longer interested in holding ISIS accountable for genocide in international courts or brokering peace between the Iraqi Federal Government and the Kurdistan Regional Government, who are in protracted conflict over control of the Sinjar region.

The same Yazidis who were vital to the survival and success of the U.S. military now need support to survive themselves. As a community, we have endured the trauma of wars, sanctions, years of unrest, and an attempt to eradicate our existence. Many of our people are scattered throughout the world or live in internal displacement camps because of the destruction and instability in our homeland.

During my recent visit, I spoke with survivors and the Iraq team of Nadia’s Initiative, an organization that I co-founded with my wife Nadia Murad and where I serve as executive director. The Initiative has been working in Sinjar since 2018. We heard from local residents about the immense challenges of rebuilding homes and businesses next to mass graves, trying to stave off the COVID pandemic when they still have to travel many miles to receive basic primary care, and trying to recover from ISIS captivity when women still do not have ways to feed their families. The stories made it even more clear to me that Yazidis need international assistance to rebuild our community.

The efforts by Nadia’s Initiative to restore essential services have improved living conditions and increased opportunities for Yazidis. But objectives such as resolving the power struggle in Sinjar, rescuing Yazidi women and children still in captivity, holding ISIS accountable for international crimes, and supporting the holistic rehabilitation of a persecuted minority are beyond the capacity of NGOs alone.

They are, however, achievable. The U.S. government has played an important role in shaping Iraq’s democracy. Minorities like Yazidis need American support to ensure that we can be an equal part of that society, with all of the attendant rights and freedoms.

How the U.S. Can Support Yazidis Today and for the Long Term

I call on U.S. policymakers and civil society to demonstrate their sympathy with more direct action — to put their financial and political weight behind supporting survivors, rehabilitating the region, and pursuing justice and accountability. Among the invaluable assistance the United States could provide is to help:

Rescue and Reunite Women and Children

To this day, 2,700 women and children are still in ISIS captivity. Many Yazidi families have evidence that their loves ones are still alive, but they are unable to amass the resources and capacity to mount rescue efforts. Some captives are still trafficked throughout Iraq, Syria, Turkey, and elsewhere on searchable online forums, and others remain with ISIS militants in detention camps in Syria but have not been provided safe pathways to reveal their identities.

Given the dispersal of captives across countries, centralized international coordination is necessary for the success of rescue missions. The United States can help end this atrocity of modern-day slavery by leading or supporting an international effort to locate and rescue the missing Yazidis. Every day that rescue efforts are delayed is another day that women and children are trafficked and abused.

Press for Expedited Mass Grave Exhumations to Bring Closure in Yazidis’ Healing

Unexhumed mass graves are a major barrier in the Yazidis’ attempt to return to Sinjar. There are more than 80 mass graves spread throughout Sinjar, only 30 of which have been exhumed. These unexhumed mass graves are not only reminders of the violence the community faced, but also represent the unknown fates of loved ones. Many of these mass graves are left exposed and in the middle of villages, which is far too traumatizing for Yazidis to return to.

The United States can expedite the process to exhume and identify mass graves by spurring the U.N. Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by ISIL (ISIS) to fulfill its mandate to exhume graves and identify remains, earmarking funding for exhumation efforts, and encouraging Iraq to invite actors such as the International Commission on Missing Persons to create a team dedicated to exhumations and identifications in Sinjar. Increasing the capacity of exhumation efforts is crucial for bringing closure and healing for the community.

Support the Redevelopment and Rebuilding of Sinjar

Additionally, the United States can earmark funding to ensure Yazidis have adequate infrastructure to return and rebuild their lives in Sinjar. When ISIS waged its systematic assault on Sinjar, nearly 80 percent of public infrastructure and 70 percent of civilian homes were destroyed. The United States can continue to fund sustainable development, such as the rebuilding of schools, medical facilities, roads, and water and sanitation services. During the next three years, $150 million would help put these development goals into action and make a sizeable impact on stabilizing the region. By funding redevelopment for the region of Sinjar, the United States can help Yazidis safely and securely return home.

But impact also depends on the kind of investment. Funding long-term, sustainable redevelopment project rather than short-term aid to camps will ensure that Yazidis have the tools and resources to thrive and be self-sufficient for generations to come.

Utilize Political Power to Ensure Long-Lasting Change

Finally, U.S. officials and elected leaders can use their political power to press the Iraqi Federal Government and Kurdistan Regional Government to achieve lasting stabilization in Sinjar. Facilitating democratic elections, incorporating Yazidis into local security forces, and removing militia groups from the region are needed steps for lasting peace and stability. The United States can leverage its continued military support for both governments to put positive pressure on peace talks and ensure that Yazidis have meaningful representation in all decision-making processes.

Designating a Special Envoy

To monitor the situation of Yazidis and other minorities in Iraq, the U.S. government should assign a special envoy solely dedicated to facilitating sustainable development, security, and justice efforts. The envoy should closely consult the Yazidi community and coordinate with the U.N. and other partners to streamline interventions and make sure the U.S. is kept abreast of developments affecting Yazidis and other religious minorities.

Conclusion

Ultimately, we need the United States to do for Yazidis what we did for them – provide support so we can accomplish goals that are unattainable on our own. Just as the Yazidis were instrumental in ensuring U.S. military personnel were able to return home, the United States can help the Yazidi community return to Sinjar and rebuild our lives. In doing so, U.S. leaders would help accomplish the objectives for Iraq that they established back in 2003 – stabilizing the region and protecting human rights and religious freedom for all.

https://www.justsecurity.org/84389/how- ... y-in-iraq/

NOTE: The US and the coalition came into the situation far too late to prevent many of the deaths and imprisonments and were also the ones who caused much of the destruction to Yazidi lands as they attempted to bomb ISIS into oblivion

Obviously ISIS were not standing in the middle of open fields waiting to be bombed. Along with bombing ISIS, the US and coalition were destroying Yazidi homes, businesses, farms, the very services and infrastructure Yazidis need to survive

The US and coalition spent a fortune dropping bombs but have failed to spend money on rebuilding the very Yazidis properties, businesses etc they helped to destroy

Rather than help Yazidis the world has continued ISIS destruction of Yazidi culture: instead of rebuilding the Yazidi lands and way of life, they have encouraged the Yazidis to divide, leave their lands and move to other countries

Worse than that, the world has left the Yazidi homelands in the hands of assorted violent gangs who have no place there and who have caused so much fear that THOUSANDS of Yazidis are far too terrified to return home

NEVER forget the countless number of Yazidis who died on the mountain while fleeing from ISIS
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Tue Dec 20, 2022 5:36 pm

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Soldiers carry coffins in mass funeral
UN more ISIS convictions next year

The UN is expecting more convictions against ISIS fighters who committed atrocities against the Yazidi people next year after gathering millions of pieces of battlefield evidence

It comes as the UN’s Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by ISIS (Unitad) is due to open another mass grave believed to contain 500 missing Yazidi men murdered by the terrorist group.

In a webinar Options for Survivor-centred Justice in Iraq on Monday, Unitad said it expected more prosecutions and convictions of ISIS next year as it was preparing more files.

It has now identified 2,181 ISIS members linked to crimes against the Yazidis, including 156 foreign fighters.

Using more than two million pieces of data from mobile phones, investigators have been able to place the ISIS members at the scenes of the atrocities.

Joern Oliver Eiermann, a legal adviser to Unitad, said the group was gathering battlefield evidence and collecting witness statements.

“We are supporting 17 different EU member states and we are hoping to see more judgments and verdicts next year,” he said.

“But in order to prosecute international crimes in Iraq there needs to be legislation and that legislation doesn't exist. The survivors want to see perpetrators in court.”

Human rights lawyer Bojan Govrilovic is calling for Iraq to adopt legislation to allow ISIS prosecutions to take place there.

“Ensuring accountability is key to preventing atrocity crimes and their recurrence,” he said.

“It is very clear that Yazidi community continues to be at risk from atrocity crimes. Weak or absent accountability feeds impunity and the cycle of atrocity crimes. We have been encouraging the government of Iraq to consider national and international action to hold ISIS accountable. More needs to be done.

“I urge the government of Iraq to pass legislation that would allow the prosecution of atrocity crimes. I would urge everybody to multiply their efforts for accountability for atrocity crimes.

“The survivors are still waiting for justice and accountability.”

Unitad has now found more than 30 mass graves linked to ISIS's genocide of the Yazidi community in Iraq.

It is due to start work on the excavation of the Bir ALU Antar sinkhole and expects to find “valuable” forensic evidence linked to ISIS crimes.

It is anticipated that the remains of at least 400 to 500 Yazidi men who were reportedly killed there on or around April 26, 2015, will be recovered.

There are believed to be more than 200 mass graves containing up to 12,000 bodies in Iraq, which are attributed to ISIS.

The extremists were defeated late in 2017 after the battle for Mosul.

https://www.thenationalnews.com/world/u ... next-year/
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Re: Yazidi UPDATES genocide has occurred and is ongoing

PostAuthor: Anthea » Wed Dec 21, 2022 8:57 pm

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Need to free women from ISIS

Iraq’s highest Shiite authority Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani on Monday urged the need the free the remaining women in captivity of the Islamic State (ISIS) from the group’s grasp in a meeting with the head of the United Nations investigation team into ISIS crimes

Sistani received Christian Ritscher, Special Adviser and head of the United Nations Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Daesh/ISIS (UNITAD) in his residence in Najaf, and was briefed on the progress that Iraq has made in bringing justice to communities affected by ISIS’s brutal reign five years after its territorial defeat in Iraq. 

During the meeting, the top Shiite cleric stressed “the need to work on releasing the remaining Turkmen and Yazidi women from the terrorist organization’s captivity in Syria and to take effective steps in redressing its victims, especially the displaced and refugees,” while expressing support to Ritscher and his team for their efforts, reported Iraqi state media. https://www.ina.iq/173518--.html

“Since the establishment of this Team, until today here, we have constantly counted on His Eminence’s wisdom and support to our cause in serving justice, and to our work in the pursuit of accountability for all victims of ISIS international crimes in Iraq,” Ritscher said in a statement, referring to Sistani’s unwavering support for his team.

https://twitter.com/UNITAD_Iraq/status/ ... dZzeP1XMFw

Ritscher affirmed that his team will continue to provide maximum support to all of Iraq’s components as they recover from ISIS “international crimes aimed to destroy the social fabric of Iraq,” adding that UNITAD’s main mission is to ensure that the perpetrators are held accountable before courts of law. 

“Without this victory, it would not have been possible to pursue ISIS elements and hold them accountable for the crimes they committed against Iraqis, especially the crimes of murder, captivity, rape, and the destruction of Iraqi antiquities,” Sistani said, supporting Ritscher’s mission to bring the perpetrators to justice. 

ISIS rose to power and seized vast swathes of Iraqi territory in 2014 but was declared territorially defeated in the country in 2017. Iraq’s minority communities and women who the terror group took into captivity suffered untold crimes during their reign, including sexual slavery, rape, and murder. 

While the Iraqi army and Peshmerga forces regularly pursue ISIS remnants, the terror group continues to pose a serious security risk to the country, particularly in the disputed areas between Baghdad and Erbil. 

A deadly ISIS attack in southern Kirkuk province on Sunday killed at least seven members of the federal Iraqi police, including a senior officer.

https://www.rudaw.net/english/middleeast/iraq/181220221
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