October 30, 2019
By Raya Jalabi
SHARYA CAMP, Iraq (Reuters) – Islamic State leader Abu Bakr
al-Baghdadi’s death will mean nothing to 19-year-old rape victim Jamila
unless the Islamic State militants who enslaved her are brought to
justice.
Jamila, who asked not to be identified by her last name, is one of
thousands of women from the Yazidi minority religion who were kidnapped
and raped by IS after it mounted an assault on the Yazidi homeland in
northern Iraq in August 2014.
“Even if Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi is dead, it doesn’t mean Islamic State
is dead,” Jamila told Reuters outside the tent that is now her temporary
home in the Sharya camp for displaced Yazidis in Iraq’s Kurdistan
Region.
“This doesn’t feel like justice yet,” she said. “I want the men who
took me, who raped me, to stand trial. And I want to have my voice heard
in court. I want to face them in court … Without proper trials, his
death has no meaning.”
Baghdadi, who had led IS since 2010, detonated a suicide vest after
being cornered in a raid by U.S. special forces in northwest Syria, U.S.
President Donald Trump announced on Sunday.
Inspired by his edicts to enslave and slaughter Yazidis, whom IS
regard as infidels, his followers shot, beheaded and kidnapped thousands
in a rampage which the United Nations called a genocidal campaign
against them.
Along with thousands of other women and children, Jamila said she was
enslaved by the militants and kept in captivity for five months in the
city of Mosul along with her sister.
She was just 14 when she was seized. But her problems did not end
after she and her sister managed to escape when, she said, their guards
were high on drugs.
“When I first came back, I had a nervous breakdown and psychological
problems for two years, so I couldn’t go to school,” she said.
Now instead of working or catching up on her years of lost schooling,
she looks after her mother, with whom she shares her cramped tent at
the camp.
“My mother can’t walk and has health problems so I have to stay and
take care of her because my older siblings are in Germany,” she said.
NO PLANS TO GO HOME
The prospect of going home to Sinjar in northern Iraq is not an
option for Jamila, and many others. The city still lies in ruin four
years after the IS onslaught, and suspicion runs deep in the ethnically
mixed area.
“Sinjar is completely destroyed. Even if we could go back, I wouldn’t
want to because we’d be surrounded by the same Arab neighbors who all
joined IS in the first place, and helped them kill us (Yazidis),” she
said.
Thousands of men are being tried in Iraqi courts for their ties to
IS. Iraq has so far not allowed victims to testify in court, something
community leaders and human rights groups say would go a long way in the
healing process.
“It is deplorable that not a single victim of Islamic State’s
horrific abuses including sexual slavery has gotten their day in court,”
said Belkis Wille, Iraq Researcher for Human Rights Watch. “Iraq’s
justice system is designed to allow the state to exact mass revenge
against suspects, not provide real accountability for victims.”
For some of the nearly 17,000 Yazidis at the Sharya camp, Baghdadi’s
death was a first step in that direction though they fear the IS
fighters who are still alive.
Mayan Sinu, 25, can dream of a new life after the camp as she and her
three children have been granted asylum by Australia. But she also
wants the men who shot her husband in the legs and dragged him off to be
brought to justice. He has been missing since the incident five years
ago.
“I hope Baghdadi is suffering more than we ever did, and my God we
suffered,” said Sinu. “I wish he (Baghdadi) hadn’t blown himself up so I
could have slaughtered him myself with my bare hands.”
Displaced people from the Yazidi minority religion are seen at the
Sharya camp, in Duhok, Iraq October 29, 2019. REUTERS/Ari Jalal
https://www.oann.com/for-yazidis-baghdadis-death-doesnt-feel-like-justice-yet/