Islamic State magazine says group enslaved Yazidis
BAGHDAD
(AP) — Islamic State group militants captured, enslaved and sold Yazidi
women and children, the latest issue of a magazine purportedly
published by the extremists claimed Sunday, the group's first public
confirmation of the allegations.
Islamic State magazine says group enslaved Yazidis
In this photo taken Wednesday,
Oct. 8, 2014, a 15-year-old Yazidi girl captured by the Islamic State
group and forcibly married to a militant in Syria sits on the floor of a
one-room house she now shares with her family after escaping in early
August, while speaking in an interview with The Associated Press in
Maqluba, a hamlet near the Kurdish city of Dahuk, 260 miles (430
kilometers) northwest of Baghdad, Iraq. The girl was 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 in northwestern Iraq. Hundreds were killed in the attack, and
tens of thousands fled for their lives, most to Kurdish-held parts of
the north. (AP Photo/Dalton Bennett)
The claim came as Human Rights Watch said Sunday that hundreds of Yazidi men, women and children from Iraq are being held captive in makeshift detention facilities in Iraq and Syria by the group.
Tens of thousands of Yazidis fled into the Sinjar Mountains, many getting stranded there for weeks, after the militant onslaught on Sinjar in August, part of the Islamic State group's lightning advance across northern and western Iraq. Hundreds were killed in the attack, and tens of thousands fled for their lives, most to the Kurdish-held parts of northern Iraq.
Iraq's Human Rights Ministry said at the time that hundreds of women were abducted by the militants, who consider the Yazidis, a centuries-old religious minority, a heretical sect. Some also alleged the Islamic State group enslaved and sold Yazidi women and children, though the group itself did not comment on it.
The issue of Dabiq magazine released Sunday stated that "the enslaved Yazidi families are now sold by the Islamic State soldiers." It added that "the Yazidi women and children were then divided according to the Shariah amongst the fighters of the Islamic State who participated in the Sinjar operations."
Most of the Yazidis are now displaced in northern Iraq, many having lost loved ones in their flight to safety. Some say that their women and girls were snatched during the militant raid.
In one section of the magazine, a statement attributed to Mohammed al-Adnani, the spokesman for the Islamic State group, read: "We will conquer your Rome, break your crosses, and enslave your women," addressing those who do not subscribe to its hard-line interpretation of Islam.
The release of the magazine came as New York-based Human Rights Watch said Yazidi men, women and children remain held by the group. Its report noted that the group "separated young women and teenage girls from their families and has forced some of them to marry its fighters."
One woman told
Human Rights Watch that she saw Islamic State fighters buying girls,
and a teenage girl said a fighter bought her for $1,000, the report
said. The Associated Press independently has interviewed a number of
Yazidi women and girls who escaped captivity and several claimed that
they were sold to Islamic State fighters in Iraq and Syria.
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