This page provides context and legal background regarding the crimes committed by ISIS against Yezidis, including genocide, crimes against humanity, and other international and national crimes and human rights violations. According to Yezidi historians, this is the 74th genocide perpetrated against the Yezidi people.
By the end of June 2014, the Islamic State of Iraq and al-Sham (ISIS) had conquered over a third of Iraq. Their newly expanded territory included Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul, and the country’s largest oil refinery in Baiji; their territory also now encircled the district of Sinjar, home to a majority of the world’s Yezidi people.
Only a narrow, contested route north now connected Sinjar to the outside world. And as the local Iraqi Army division had collapsed, only a thin line of Kurdish peshmerga fighters remained to defend the area.[1]
On 3 August 2014, ISIS attacked Sinjar before dawn.[2] The onslaught began in the south, ISIS convoys arriving in the Yezidi villages of Girzerik and Siba Sheikhkhedir, outfitted with plunder from the Iraqi military. Quickly outmatched, the Yezidis’ peshmerga fled the entire as dawn broke, giving no warning to the villages they had abandoned.
Almost immediately, it became apparent that ISIS had a distinct, brutal plan for the Yezidi people. ISIS sent envoys ahead to some Yezidi villages, reassuring them that ISIS’s plans for the region meant only one further change in governance for the contested region, that Yezidis who surrendered would not be harmed. Some of these envoys were friendly Arab or Turkmen neighbours, long-known to the Yezidis villagers. North of Sinjar, many Yezidis waited to learn more, wanting to believe these reassuring messengers. As they learned what was happening in the south, they too began to flee.
ISIS quickly seized the roads and villages south of Mount Sinjar, including Sinjar town; Yezidis’ only escape was to flee up the mountain itself in treacherous August heat. North of Sinjar, some Yezidis made it onto the road north into Iraqi Kurdistan before ISIS closed the route, besieging some 50,000 Yezidis on Mount Sinjar.
Capture
Thousands of other Yezidis never made it to the mountain. Around its base, ISIS drained nearly every Yezidi village of inhabitants within 72 hours. Only in the storied village of Kocho did villagers largely remain in place. There, ISIS had seized control of the peshmerga posts intended to defend the village, trapping residents within its walls.
Initial Executions
ISIS captured over 6,000 Yezidis, many women and children. In many instances, ISIS convoys immediately separated men and older boys from women and children, their families left to witness as ISIS summarily executed those who refused to “convert” to Islam. Other Yezidi captives saw their unburied bodies later on as ISIS members drove them through Sinjar.
Destruction of Shrines and Property
As ISIS seized territorial control of Sinjar, ISIS destroyed Yezidi temples and shrines, including the shrines of Sheikh Mand in Jiddala, the Sheikh Hassan shrine in Gabara, the Malak Fakhraddin shrine on Sikeeniya, and the Mahma Rasha shrine in Solagh.
Forced Conversions
ISIS convoys took Yezidi captives to clearly pre-designated detention sites—converted schools, celebration halls, and prisons across Iraq and Syria. There, remaining men and older boys were now separated from the women and children. The men and boys were sometimes held a few days and briefly indoctrinated before being forced to choose between ‘conversion’ and death.
Sexual Enslavement of Women and Girls
After separating the men and older boys, ISIS fighters began to take away Yezidi girls and young women, bringing them to markets where they would be sold as property and brutally sexually enslaved. ISIS’s market the enslaved Yezidi girls was meticulously organised; only isolated instances of rape occurred outside the bounds of ISIS’s rigid system of property. However, once a girl or woman was ‘sold’, her ISIS owner held complete ownership over her; he could gift or sell her to other fighters. According to ISIS guidance, 80 percent of the girls were sold for individual ownership and sold directly to ISIS fighters. The other 20 percent of the women would be ‘collective’ property held at military bases. While certain regulations existed–like ensuring that women and girls were not pregnant before they were sold—they were frequently broken.
Forced Recruitment of Yezidi Boys as Child Soldiers
Yezidi boys over the age of seven were taken away from their mothers. ISIS fighters brought them to camps to be indoctrinated into ISIS and trained as child soldiers. They were held with Sunni Arab boys, taught ISIS’s interpretation of Islam and trained to fight and kill ‘kuffar’ (infidels), as ISIS considered their family members. ISIS cut off all contact with the Yezidi boys’ community and forcibly imposed their identity as ISIS recruits.
Living as “Converts”
“Conversion” did not bring captured Yezidi men equivalent status with Sunni men in ISIS territory. Men and boys who had converted rather than die remained prisoners. Escape attempts were punished by execution.
In addition to forced labour [described subsequently], as the captives were now ‘Muslim’, they were held to ISIS dicta; the men and boys were forced to pray five times a day, grow their beards and hair, and attend mosque. Men or boys who failed to adhere with these rules would be beaten.
Enslavement
Yezidi men and older boys who had converted rather than be killed were held prisoner and enslaved. After weeks detained at schools or in prisons, these Yezidi men and boys were relocated to Qasil Qio and Qasr Mihrab. There (and later on in al-Khadra), the men and boys were forced to labour on construction projects, dig trenches, clean streets, and tend livestock without compensation. Some of these converts were also reunited with female relatives and children who had not been sold as slaves themselves. They were strictly surveilled by ISIS members who patrolled the perimeters of the villages and raided the villages to seize women and girls despite their ‘conversion.’
Women and girls who were sold as sex slaves were also forced to perform other domestic labour for ISIS households, although some would not allow Yezidis to cook, calling them ‘dirty’; according to ISIS’s guidelines, the ISIS fighters wives could also have exclusive ownership over Yezidi women and girls for household labour.
Recognizing ISIS’s Crimes as Genocide
ISIS’s crimes against the Yezidi people were not merely incidental to warfare. ISIS scholars had studied the Yezidi faith long before their attack, and their leadership meticulously planned the ensuing savagery. Their crimes against the Yezidi people have been recognised by the United Nations as genocide. The following sections explain the elements of the crime of genocide and why ISIS’s attack on the Yezidis of Sinjar constitutes this gravest of crimes.
[1]Christine van Der Toon, The Iraqi Kurdish ‘Winners’ of the Current Crisis Haven’t Won Quite Yet, Niqash, 17 June 2014 https://auis.edu.krd/iris/publications/iraqi-kurdish-%E2%80%98winners%E2%80%99-current-crisis-haven%E2%80%99t-won-quite-yet; Cathy Otten, Slaves of Isis: the long walk of the Yazidi women, The Guardian, 25 July 2017, https://www.theguardian.com/world/2017/
jul/25/slaves-of-isis-the-long-walk-of-the-yazidi-women.
[2] The following summary is based off of “They came to destroy”: ISIS Crimes Against the Yazidis, Human Rights Council Report (A/HRC/32/CRP.2) (Advance Version), June 15, 2016, https://www.ohchr.org/Documents/
HRBodies/HRCouncil/CoISyria/
A_HRC_32_CRP.2_en.pdf. See also, Cathy Otten, Slaves of Isis: the long walk of the Yazidi women, The Guardian, 25 July 2017,
https://www.theguardian.com
/world/2017/jul/25/slaves-of-isis-the-long-
walk-of-the-yazidi-women
Genocide is an internationally recognised crime where certain acts are committed with the intent to destroy, in whole or in part, a national, ethnic, racial, or religious group. There are five categories of genocidal acts:
(a) Killing members of the group;
(b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group;
(c) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
(d) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group;
(e) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group.[3]
The law was codified in the Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide of 1948 and the definition is replicated in the Rome Statue. To qualify as genocide, any of the acts listed above must be perpetrated with the specific intent to destroy, in whole in part, a qualifying identity group.
[3]Convention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide, Article II, 9 December 1948, http://www.ohchr.org/EN/
ProfessionalInterest/Pages/
CrimeOfGenocide.aspx,
Yezidis Status as a Targeted Group
Genocide can only be committed against specific protected groups, namely: national, ethnic, racial, or religious groups. Yezidis qualify as a religious or an ethno-religious group.
Yezidis’ identity as a distinct religious group is unambiguous. The Yezidi faith—one indigenous to the region—has existed for thousands of years, adapting elements of later faiths including Zoroastrianism, Judaism, Christianity, and Islam. Yezidis consider themselves a distinct religious faith; ISIS also viewed Yezidis as a distinct faith and targeted them based on their religious beliefs.
The Genocide Convention defines ethnic groups as those “whose members share a common language or culture.” However, there is debate over whether Yezidis, who speak Kurdish dialects, are a distinct ethnic group rather than Kurdish. Although widely considered a religious minority within the Kurdish ethnic group, many Yezidis do not consider themselves Kurdish.
Whether considered an ethno-religious or simply a religious group, the Yezidis are clearly a group identified by and protected under the Genocide Convention.
Required Intent
For any of the listed acts to be considered genocidal—even mass killings—they must be committed with a specific genocidal intentto cause the destruction, in whole or in part, of a protected group.[4]
Usually, determining genocidal intent is a challenging exercise; perpetrators may try to conceal their motives which must be inferred from some combination of statements and actions; ISIS, however, expressly stated their intent to destroy the Yezidi people.
Two months after their attack on Sinjar, ISIS published an article called “The Revival of Slavery Before the Hour” in its English language magazine, Dabiq, that stated: “Their [Yezidis] continual existence to this day is a matter that Muslims should question as they will be asked about it on Judgment Day.”[5]
The article showed the extent of ISIS’s planning for their attack on the Yezidis, explaining how—prior to taking Sinjar—ISIS’s Shariah students researched how people of the Yezidi faith should be treated. The article explained that unlike Jews or Christians, Yezidis would not be permitted to make a jizyah payment, a taxlike payment for non-Muslim religions of the book to remain in the Caliphate. These students further determined that Yezidi women—unlike Jews, Christians, or Shia Muslims—could be enslaved.
In addition to extensive internal and external documentation of ISIS’s specific intent, the group’s conduct is extremely consistent with an attempt to destroy the Yezidi people. ISIS leaders undertook a massive organisational effort to ensure fighters precisely implemented their plans across Sinjar, transferring thousands of Yezidi captives to clearly pre-designated holding sites, separating out older boys and men for forced conversion or execution, and immediately implementing a complex system for registering and selling Yezidi women and children.
ISIS’s intent to destroy the Yezidis is further evinced by the group’s hyper focus on the Yezidis rather than other groups as they seized control of Sinjar.
There is no gray area. ISIS deliberately planned to destroy the Yezidi people because of their identity as Yezidi people; they clearly possessed the specific intent required to commit genocide.
Prohibited Conduct
ISIS committed crimes in every category of prohibited conduct in their genocide against the Yezidi people. These crimes are summarised here in the order they are listed in the Genocide Convention.
a) Killing Members of the Group: Mass Executions and Individual Killings
ISIS intentionally killed over 3,000 Yezidis in their initial assault on Sinjar.[6] ISIS fighters executed hundreds of Yezidis men and boy Yezidis who refused to convert to Islam. There is extensive documentation of these killings, including from ISIS’s own statements and documentation. According to statistics from the Kidnapped Yazidis Rescue Office, there are 83 mass graves of Yezidis across Sinjar in addition to tens of individual graves.[7]
In their siege of the Yezidis on Mount Sinjar, ISIS deliberately caused thousands more deaths of Yezidis deprived of food, water, and emergency medical assistance.
ISIS singled out Yezidis based on their religious faith and killed them; these crimes clearly can be recognised as acts of genocide.
b) Causing serious bodily or mental harm to members of the group
ISIS deliberately caused serious bodily and mental harm to Yezidi men, women, and children. ISIS subjected Yezidis to sexual violence, systematic slavery—both sexual slavery and other forced labour, beatings and other brutal physical and psychological mistreatment.
Rape and Sexual Slavery
Rape and sexual violence can qualify as both serious physical and serious mental harm—and if carried out with requisite intent—can constitute genocide.[8] Sexual enslavement Is a crime in itself beyond rape; under the Rome Statute, sexual enslavement is a crime against humanity.
ISIS systematically planned and enacted the rape and sexual enslavement of Yezidi women and girls with the intent to humiliate and destroy the Yezidi people. According to ISIS’s interpretation of Islam, 80 percent of Yezidi girls and young women were sold to individual ISIS members as property; men could re-sell, gift, or will them to other ISIS fighters as they chose. Another 20 percent were kept as ‘collective property’ and held at military bases. In the course of sexual enslavement, Yezidi women and girls would be raped dozens, even hundreds of times, often by multiple perpetrators.
Enslavement
Enslavement—separate from sexual enslavement—is also a crime against humanity according to the Rome Statute. ISIS enslaved Yezidi men, women, and children.
In addition to sexual enslavement, Yezidi women and girls were forced to do domestic labour for ISIS fighters and their families. Yezidi men and boys were also forced to do various labour, doing construction, looking after livestock, digging trenches, and cleaning in Tal Afar and Mosul—thus held as slaves. ISIS threatened and severely beat men, women, and children who refused tasks.
Torture and inhuman and degrading treatment
Other physical and psychological mistreatment belies categories. Upon capture, ISIS separated Yezidi men and older boys from women and children, rending families in half and leaving some women and children forever uncertain what happened to their male relatives. Others endured the psychological trauma of bearing witness to the mass executions that followed. ISIS then split women, girls, and young boys from their family members.
Yezidi women and girls lived as chattel under ISIS and faced deprivation of liberty in every aspect of their lives with untold psychological harm; an unknown number of women and girls ended or attempted to end their own lives. This brutal sexual violence bore a massive physical and psychological toll now endured by Yezidi survivors.
The youngest Yezidi children were permitted to stay with their mothers during their enslavement but experienced the loss and separation from their fathers and older siblings. They were also aware of the ongoing sexual violence inflicted on their mothers and frequently threatened, beaten, and otherwise mistreated.
ISIS further inflicted serious mental and physical harm on young Yezidi boys who endured the traumatic separation from their families and were forced to convert and taken to indoctrination camps for military training: boys were beaten, trained for suicide bombing, and forced to watch violent war propaganda in addition to being forced to participate in hostilities, often as suicide bombers. ISIS used such abuse to destroy the boys’ identity as Yezidis.
Throughout Yezidis’ experience in captivity, there was deprivation of food and water and frequent threats, insults, and degradation. Any resistance to ISIS was met with beatings and mistreatment; ISIS cracked down upon escape attempts with punishments ranging from gang rape and serious bodily harm to execution.
As the above sections make clear, there is no question that ISIS caused serious bodily and mental harm to Yezidis qualifying as genocidal conduct. The summary provided here is far from comprehensive accounting of such instances of physical and psychological harm that ISIS perpetuated against Yezidis.
a) Deliberately inflicting on the group conditions of life calculated to bring about its physical destruction in whole or in part;
Conditions of life calculated to bring about physical destruction of a group can include “deliberate deprivation of resources indispensable for survival” or systematic expulsion from homes.[9] ISIS besieged tens of thousands of Yezidis who had sought refuge on Mount Sinjar, cutting Yezidis off from food, water, and medical care. ISIS attacked planes dropping supplies and helicopters attempting medical rescues.
Rape can also qualify as conduct which does not “lead immediately to the death of members of the group” but is calculated to bring about the group’s destruction.[10] ISIS conduct—subjecting women and girls to systematic rapes by ISIS fighters while restricting food, water, and medical care and inflicting beatings for failure to obey orders—caused deaths of Yezidi women and children.
ISIS’s brutal treatment of both Yezidis they besieged and Yezidis they captured both qualify as conditions of life calculated to bring about the Yezidis’ destruction.
a) Imposing measures intended to prevent births within the group
ISIS imposed a wide number of measures intended to prevent Yezidi births. Most simply, ISIS’s first act upon capturing Yezidis was to separate women from men and to kill hundreds of Yezidi men. Except for the small group of captive Yezidi men whom ISIS deemed had converted to Islam and permitted to reunite with their wives (and then forced into slave labour), Yezidi men and women were kept apart.
Such separation is of the utmost significance because in the Yezidi faith, both the father and mother must be Yezidi for their child to be Yezidi. There is no possibility to convert to the Yezidi religion. By the simple act of separating Yezidi men from women, ISIS deliberately imposed a condition to prevent births within the group.
Less directly, rape and sexual assault can prevent birth when a survivor of rape or sexual assault subsequently refuses to procreate.[11] Many Yezidi women and girls who have suffered repeated sexual violence suffer from lasting fear of contact with men and disinterest in future sexual relationships. This is an expected consequence of such severe trauma and one that limits romantic relationships for Yezidi survivors. Concern and shame over ‘lost honour’ compound this trauma.
ISIS knowingly and deliberately imposed direct and indirect measures to prevent births of new Yezidi children.
b) Forcibly transferring children of the group to another group
ISIS forcibly transferred Yezidi boy and girl children away from their families. At nine years old, ISIS took girls from their mothers and sold them to ISIS fighters. Yezidi boys were taken from their mothers at the age of seven, sent to ISIS training camps, indoctrinated into ISIS beliefs, and trained as child soldiers. Some Yezidi children lost all notion of their identity, forgetting their family members, and becoming indoctrinated into ISIS’s warped belief system. Other children—forced to fight on the frontlines—lost their lives.
ISIS’s methodical taking of Yezidi children—girls as sex slaves and boys as child recruits—clearly qualifies as forcible transfer of children.
Conclusion
In their effort to destroy the Yezidi people, ISIS perpetrated conduct in every category listed by the Genocide Convention. Although ISIS no longer controls territory in Iraq and Syria, the effects of genocide persist. Suicides within the Yezidi community are on the rise. Families exist in remnants, the fates of their loved ones yet unknown. Those who do return face brutal challenges to heal and reintegrate; some children return believing the ideology of their captors. No Yezidi has been spared this collective trauma. For too many Yezidis, justice remains elusive. The first step towards any reckoning must be calling these crimes what they are: genocide.
[4] Prosecutor v. Rutaganda, ICTR Trial Judgment, 6 Dec. 1999 (“Rutaganda Trial Judgment”), para. 60.
[5] The Failed Crusade, “The Revival of Slavery Before the Hour”, Dabiq, 11 October 2014.
[6] Valeria Cetorelli, Isaac Sasson, Nazar Shabila, Gilbert Burnham, “Mortality and kidnapping estimates for the Yazidi population in the area of Mount Sinjar, Iraq, in August 2014: A retrospective household survey”, PLOS Medicine, 9 May 2017, https://journals.plos.org/plosmedicine/article?id=10.1371/journal.pmed.1002297.
[7] احصائية رسمية جديدة عن ضحايا الايزيديين على يد تنظيم داعش بالعراق, Shafaq News, 2 September 2019, https://rb.gy/gvggtg.
[8] Prosecutor v. Akayesu, ICTR Trial Judgment, 2 September 1998 (“Akayesu Trial Judgement”), para. 502.
[9] Footnote 4, Article 6(c) of the Rome Statute.
[10] Prosecutor v. Kayishema et al., ICTR Trial Judgment, 21 May 1999 (“Kayishema Trial Judgment”) para. 116.
[11] Akayesu Trial Judgment, para. 508.
Genocide is known as “the crime of crimes”, the worst offense one can commit. Recognising ISIS’s calculated, devastating atrocities against the Yezidi people as genocide acknowledges the gravity of harm caused by ISIS and endured by the Yezidi people. It rallies attention to the Yezidi cause and underscores the international communities’ need to provide survivors resources and refuge. In Iraq and Iraqi Kurdistan, recognition should encourage a reckoning on how such ‘crime of crimes’ was allowed to happen and what can be done to make amends for this devastated community.
As a legal matter, recognition of genocide bears a separate importance. States are obligated to prevent and punish acts of genocide. In 2014, the international community failed this obligation when states did not prevent the genocide; their duty remains to punish perpetrators. Recognition of the Yezidi genocide is also recognition that ISIS perpetrators must be brought to justice.
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