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Updated 28 Oct, 2016 09:52am

From IS slaves to global voices for Yazidis

GENEVA: Nadia Murad and Lamia Haji Bashar endured months-long nightmare as sex slaves of the militant Islamic State group (IS) before becoming the faces of a campaign to protect their Yazidi people from a genocidal threat.

Murad, a slight, softly spoken young woman, was taken by the IS from her home village of Kocho near Iraq’s northern town of Sinjar in August 2014 and brought to the city of Mosul.

As a captive of the reviled extremist group, Murad, who today is 23, said she was tortured and raped.

The IS made her disavow her Yazidi faith, an ancient religion with more than half a million adherents concentrated near the Syrian border in northern Iraq.

“The first thing they did was they forced us to convert to Islam,” Murad told AFP in an interview earlier this year at the United Nations in Geneva, through an Arabic translator.

In a December speech at the UN Security Council in New York, Murad recounted her so-called “marriage” to one IS captor.

He mocked her, beat her and then ordered her to wear makeup and revealing clothes, she told the council.

“I was not able to take any more rape and torture,” she said, explaining why she decided to flee.

‘Remarkably strong’

Bashar is also from Kocho and was just 16 when she was taken.

“This is a remarkably strong woman who endured things I wouldn’t wish on anyone,” said psychologist Jan Kizilhan who helped arrange for her to receive treatment in Germany.

“Many of her close acquaintances and relatives were killed by the IS before her eyes before she was captured, enslaved, sold several times and repeatedly raped along with other Yazidi girls.”

She tried to break free of her captors several times during her 20 months in captivity before finally succeeding. But even after her escape, she fell into the hands of an Iraqi hospital director in the town of Hawjiah who also abused and raped her and several other victims.

She finally made it out with two friends. But en route to the city of Kirkuk, one trod on a landmine, killing her instantly, said Mirza Dinnayi, founder of the German-Iraqi aid group Air Bridge Iraq.

Dinnayi has been looking after Bashar since her arrival in Germany in April. Bashar escaped with her life but suffered horrific burns to her face from the blast, losing her right eye.

‘Genocide must be recognised’

On the run in Mosul — IS’s last remaining stronghold in Iraq — Murad said she was terrified that no one would take her in. But she ultimately found shelter with a Muslim family in the city.

“They made me an Islamic ID,” which she used to cross the border into Iraqi Kurdistan, she told AFP.

In some respects, Murad’s life lay in ruins after her harrowing escape.

The 2014 massacre perpetrated against the Yazidis by IS fighters in Sinjar forced tens of thousands to flee and left an already vulnerable community under perilous threat.

UN investigators have said the IS assault on the Yazidis was a premeditated effort to exterminate an entire community — crimes that amount to genocide.

Murad said she lost six brothers and her mother in the Sinjar assault.

While living in a displaced persons’ camp in Kurdistan, Murad contacted the Yazidi welfare organisation Yazda, which helped her move to Germany to live with her sister.

In speeches and interviews, Murad has voiced deep frustration with the international community for abandoning her people in the hands of grotesquely violent criminals.

World powers failed to “rescue us from this genocide,” she said after addressing a Human Rights Council side event in June.

“For you to regain the trust of the Yazidis will take a lot of work,” she said at the event.

She has become a Goodwill Ambassador for the UN’s office on drugs and crime, working for victims of human trafficking.

Bashar, for her part, is living with her sister in southern Germany and working towards recovery from her debilitating injuries. She is now able to walk again independently, Dinnayi said.

She dreams of becoming an elementary school teacher and staying in Germany.

“She is a very lively, funny person with a lot of friends,” Kizilhan said. “She did not lose her courage and is fighting to survive.”—AFP

Published in Dawn, October 28th, 2016

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