14 Nov 2024
Thursday 4 August 2016 - 13:00
Story Code : 225678

Izadis mark second anniversary of Daesh massacre in Sinjar



Izadis in Iraq's Kurdistan region and across the world have held vigils to mark the second anniversary of Daesh massacre in the town ofSinjar, and call for the release of those still being kept as slaves.

Scores of people gathered at Sharafadeen Shrine on the outskirts of Sinjarnorthwest of Baghdad on Wednesday,calling for international help to bring perpetrators to justiceand secure the freedom of some 3,770 women still in Daesh captivity.

My only wish is to save our sisters who are under the captivity of Daesh, an elderly Izadi woman, who managed to escape the terrorist group in August 2014, said.

We do not want anything. We only want our mothers and sisters to be free, said another Izadi woman, whose family members are still being held by the Takfiri group.

It is true that Shingal (another name for Sinjar) is liberated but there is no celebration until our girls are free, she added.

Elsewhere on the suburbs of the Iraqi Kurdish city of Halabja, many people climbed a hill to commemorate the liberation of Sinjar in November 2015 from Daesh militants.

Nearly 4,000 Izadis also took part in a silent march through Turkeys southeastern Kurdish-populated cityof Diyarbakir to commemorate the massacreand their loved ones who were taken hostage.



[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="555"] Izadi women cry as they attend a demonstration at a refugee camp in Diyarbakir, southeastern Turkey, to mark the second anniversary of the Sinjar massacre. Reuters[/caption]

In London, Yazda, an Izadi advocacy organization, held a commemoration in coordination with several other Britain-based groups, asking the UN to help free Izadi women and girls who were taken as sex slaves by Daesh militants.

A candlelight vigil organized by the Free Yazidi Foundation was also held in front of the White House in Washington DC.

Additionally, a march organized by Yazda was held from Alexanderplatz square to the Brandenburg Gate in the German capital of Berlin.



[caption id="" align="aligncenter" width="555"] People attend a demonstration in Berlin on August 3, 2016 to mark the second anniversary of the Sinjar massacre. Reuters[/caption]

In August 2014, Daesh terrorists overran Sinjar and systematically massacred, captured and enslaved thousands of Izadis. The UN says about 5,000 Izadi men were killed and thousands more, mostly women and children, were taken into captivity.

Over the past few months, several mass graves containing bodies of people, including members of the Izadi minority group, have been uncovered in Iraq and Syria.

A United Nations investigative panel warned on Wednesday thatDaesh is stillcommitting genocide and other crimes againstthe Izadi minoritygroup in Iraq.

In a statement, the panelurged action to prevent further deaths and suffering of the persecuted group.

By Press TV

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