Press statement by victim’s counsel Amal Clooney, Natalie von Wistinghausen, Wolfgang Bendler and the NGO Yazda


Munich, 29 August 2023

 

Today, the Higher Regional Court of Munich affirmed the conviction of ISIS member ‘Jennifer W.’ and increased her sentence from 10 to 14 years imprisonment. The judges highlighted that the defendant neglected the Yazidi victims' human rights because of their religious beliefs and that in enslaving them she intentionally furthered ISIS’ policy of destroying the Yazidi religion – aggravating factors that have not been considered by the first instance court when deciding on the sentence. 


In October 2021, the first instance court convicted the 32-year-old German national who travelled to Syria in 2014 to join ISIS, for her role in the enslavement, abuse and killing of five-year-old Yazidi girl Reda as well as the enslavement and abuse of Reda’s mother. The defendant was found guilty of aiding and abetting crimes against humanity through enslavement with the consequence of death, attempted murder and aiding and abetting the war crime of attempted murder by omission, as well as membership in a foreign terrorist organization. She was sentenced to 10 years in prison.


The court found that:

 

-  The defendant and her Iraqi ex-husband Taha A.-J. held the two Yazidis captive as ‘household slaves’ in their home in Fallujah, Iraq for approximately six weeks in the summer of 2015.


-  The defendant’s husband had bought Reda and her mother after they had been enslaved during ISIS’ brutal genocidal campaign against the Yazidis in Sinjar, Iraq in August 2014.


-  While in captivity at the couple’s house, Reda and her mother were deprived of sufficient food and subjected to almost daily beatings which the defendant often instigated.


-  The couple forced the Yazidi mother to do housework and they were forced to pray multiple times a day according to Islamic rules even though the couple knew that the captives were Yazidis. Reda was given a Muslim name which even the child's mother had to address her with.


- The girl ultimately died after the defendant’s ex-husband tied her with a cable outdoors to the bars of the window and left her hanging there in the scorching heat of up to about 50 degrees Celsius as a punishment for wetting the bed and a measure to ‘discipline’ the girl. Although the defendant had realized that Reda was in a life-threatening situation and would have been able to help, she did nothing to save her life. After the death of the girl, the defendant held a gun to the head of the grieving mother and threatened to shoot her if she did not stop crying.


- By enslaving Reda and her mother, the defendant deliberately and intentionally advanced ISIS’ agenda which aimed to eradicate the Yazidi religion and enslave Yazidi people.


In March 2023, the German Federal Court of Justice overturned the sentence upon the Federal Public Prosecutor's appeal. The defendant’s appeal was rejected. Germany’s highest court held that the lower instance court erred when qualifying aiding and abetting enslavement as a crime against humanity as a "less serious case" – a legal qualification that had resulted in a reduced sentence. Moreover, it criticized the lower instance court for not taking into account the defendant's motivation and goals, in particular the fact that by enslaving Reda and her mother she deliberately furthered ISIS’ policy, which aimed to destroy the Yazidi religion and the enslavement of the Yazidi people. The Federal Court referred the case back to (another chamber of) the Higher Regional Court of Munich to decide on the sentence.


During the sentencing hearings over the past two months, the defendant confessed to most of the facts established by the court. Regrettably, the Chamber did not spare the severely traumatized mother from having to testify again about the impact of the crimes committed –after she had already gone through 11 gruelling days of testimony before five judges during the first instance proceedings. During closing arguments, the Federal Public Prosecutor requested to sentence the defendant to 14.5 years in prison – a term very close to a life sentence, which in Germany entails a minimum of 15 years.


Reda’s mother participated in the proceedings against Jennifer W. and the separate trial against her husband Taha A.-J. as a co-plaintiff and key witness after the NGO Yazda identified her, located her in Iraq and facilitated her participation in the proceedings. Yazda has collected thousands of testimonies from Yazidi survivors and had interviewed the co-plaintiff two years prior to the start of the trial. She was represented by a legal team consisting of German lawyers Natalie von Wistinghausen and Wolfgang Bendler and UK barrister Amal Clooney.


Commenting on the final judgment, Amal Clooney said: “This decision provides a measure of justice for my client who has put her life on the line to give evidence in the trials of her captors. Her courage and determination have led to the conviction of two ISIS members for crimes against Yazidis. The conviction for genocide was the first of its kind in the world and will benefit victims of ISIS for generations to come."


Natalie von Wistinghausen, who represented the victim during the court hearings in Munich together with Wolfgang Bendler added that: “Our client's courage and steadfastness made it possible for the German judiciary to bring the perpetrators and those responsible for the death of her daughter to justice. The accused Jennifer W. and her ex-husband Taha A.J. were sentenced to long prison terms, a signal to inhuman perpetrators of international crimes that they can no longer be safe from prosecution. We hope that our client can now finally turn the page and find some peace, together with the only son who remains with her. It is for him that she somehow survives, she says.”


Natia Navrouzov, Legal Advocacy Director at Yazda, which is also represented by Ms. Clooney and has helped identify and locate victims in several criminal proceedings in different jurisdictions, said: “These proceedings took over four years of the survivor’s life and the scars of the crimes will likely remain forever. We hope this decision will, however, help her get some closure for the loss of her daughter and that moving forward, she will decide if and how she wants to speak about this again. We commend everyone involved in this case and hope other countries can draw lessons learned from it by also prosecuting ISIS members for similar crimes.”


Nadia Murad, Nobel Peace Prize Laureate, who is herself a survivor of enslavement and torture at the hands of ISIS, commented: "I am in awe of the courage displayed by Reda's mother. Her relentless pursuit of justice serves as a sign of hope for fellow survivors. I feel proud of the courage she has shown, despite the unimaginable trauma that she and her family have endured. I hope that this conviction will ultimately provide her with closure and aid in her healing process."


Background


From August 2014, the Yazidi community in Iraq and Syria was targeted by ISIS through an organized campaign of executions, enslavement, sexual violence, and forced recruitment of child soldiers, as well as the forced displacement of an estimated 400,000 Yazidis from their homeland in Iraq. Nine years after ISIS’ attack, thousands of Yazidi women and children who were abducted and enslaved by ISIS remain missing. These crimes have been recognized by the United Nations, national and international bodies and, more recently, German courts as amounting to genocide.


The trial against Jennifer W. which started in April 2019 was the first trial against an ISIS member for crimes committed against the Yazidis.


Since then, the German courts have convicted three ISIS members of genocide for their crimes against the Yazidis. The judgment issued by the Higher Regional Court of Frankfurt in November 2021 (and confirmed by the German Federal Court of Justice) against Jennifer W.’s former husband, Iraqi national Taha A.-J., represents the first conviction of an ISIS member for genocide anywhere in the world. A second genocide conviction followed in May 2022 against German ISIS returnee Jalda A. and a third conviction was issued against German ISIS returnee Nadine K. in June 2023.


Additionally, five ISIS members were convicted of crimes against humanity and war crimes for their involvement in ISIS’ crimes against the Yazidis in six cases. These are the cases against Jennifer W., Sarah O., Nurten J., Omaima A. (who faced two separate trials) and Romiena S. Ms. Clooney, Ms. von Wistinghausen and Ms. Mehner, represented Yazidi victims in these cases.


Note to editors:


Under German law, victims of grave crimes have the right to participate in criminal proceedings as ‘co-plaintiffs’ alongside the prosecution and defence. For her safety, the victim’s identity is not being revealed.


German law normally also does not permit disclosure of defendants’ full surnames. The defendant is therefore identified as ‘Jennifer W.’ throughout this statement.


Download the Statement here.

For the Arabic version, click here.



Natia Navrouzov, Legal Advocacy Director

e: natia.navrouzov@yazda.org



###


300 North 27th Street, Suite C. - Lincoln, Nebraska 68503, USA

info@yazda.org - www.yazda.org

11 December 2024
11 December 2024 Today, the international crimes division of the District Court of The Hague handed down the verdict in the Hasna A. case . It is the first trial in the Netherlands in which a member of the so-called Islamic State in Syria and the Levant (ISIL, also referred to as ISIS, IS, or by its Arabic acronym Daesh) has been convicted for crime committed against Yazidis. Hasna A., a Dutch national, travelled to Syria in 2015 with her four-year-old son, married an ISIL-member and lived in the ISIL-controlled city of Raqqa. She was tried for charges related to membership of ISIL, a terrorist group, as well as for endangering her son by bringing him with her to Syria and keeping him there. Importantly, Hasna A. also stood trial for the use of two Yazidi women as domestic slaves. The Yazidi women –referred to throughout the criminal proceedings only as ‘Z.’ and ‘S.’— had been enslaved by ISIL in August 2014. They were enslaved and kept in several houses where Hasna A. stayed whilst living in Raqqa in 2015 (Z.) and 2016 (S.), and Hasna A. forced them to perform domestic chores. Hasna A. also forced Z. to look after her four-year-old son. The slavery charges were brought against Hasna A. as crimes against humanity. Hasna A. is one of twelve Dutch women who had been repatriated from detention camps in Northern Syria at the end of 2022. She was arrested upon arrival in the Netherlands and taken into pretrial detention, appearing before the Trial Panel every three months. The Trial Panel had referred the case to the investigating judge and further investigation took place into the charges, which included hearing both Yazidi women as witnesses in 2024. The substantive hearings in the criminal proceedings against Hasna A. took place before the Trial Panel on 14, 16 and 17 October 2024. In today’s verdict, the court sentenced Hasna A. to a 10-year prison sentence for four offences: enslaving Z. in Syria in 2015, membership to the terrorist organization ISIL, promoting terrorist crimes and endangering her minor son. The court held that the enslavement of Z. amounted to a crime against humanity. The sentence is higher than the demand of the public prosecutor, who had demanded a prison sentence of eight years. The slavery charges against S. were not proven and Hasna A. was acquitted in relation to this offence. The verdict is available in Dutch and an English translation will be available soon. The two Yazidi survivors Z. and S. who participated in the trial as victims (survivors), injured parties and witnesses to the facts were accompanied by Yazda and supported throughout the process with translation, mental health and awareness support. The arrest, prosecution and trial of Hasna A. sends a clear message that, like other countries applying similar universal jurisdiction principles, the Netherlands will not be a safe haven for ISIL perpetrators. With today’s conviction, the Netherlands becomes the second country in the world to convict an ISIL-member for international crimes committed against Yazidis, looking beyond terrorism. Z. commented : "Our dream has finally come true, and we’ve achieved the result we longed for. This woman, Hasna A., caused us immense harm, and now it’s time for justice to prevail. Holding individuals accountable for their actions is a vital part of the justice process." S. added: "Honestly, I’m truly relieved to see justice finally served. However, a 10-year prison sentence feels insufficient and will never fully compensate for the suffering we have endured.” The outcome of this trial would have also not been possible without their legal representatives, Brechtje Vossenberg and Barbara van Straaten from law firm Prakken d’Oliveira Human Rights Lawyers in Amsterdam (the Netherlands). Brechtje Vossenberg commented: “It is thanks to the bravery and resilience of women like Z. and S. that the court was able to hand this verdict down and convict Hasna A. for the international crime of slavery committed against Z. Despite the disappointment that the charges relating to S. were unfortunately not proven, the verdict still marks another milestone in the long road to justice for the Yazidi community. It is the first of its kind here in the Netherlands and an important signal that the international crimes committed against Yazidis will be prosecuted here whenever possible. My clients’ participation in this trial was crucial to the establishment of the truth and the measure of justice that was obtained here today. I take my hat off to them both.” The Dutch court took a groundbreaking approach by providing online access to the substantive hearing sessions in both Dutch and Kurdish Kurmanji. This allowed survivors abroad and those who were unable to attend the hearings in person, to follow remotely both the substantive hearings in October and the pronouncement of the judgement today. Yazda facilitated screenings of the trial in Duhok (Kurdistan Region of Iraq) and Sinjar (Federal Iraq) where most of the global Yazidi community members currently reside. Around 40 members of the Yazidi community, including family members of one of the witnesses in the case attended the events and were, for the first time in a decade, able to witness justice in action. Following the verdict, one participant commented: “We want ISIL criminals to face fair sentencing, and we hope other countries will follow the Netherlands’ example in prosecuting these criminals.” Another added: “Other trials should be accessible online, and survivors in those countries should be invited to attend.” This trial is another milestone in the quest for justice by ISIL survivors. It is also only the 10th conviction worldwide of an ISIL member for crimes against Yazidis, a decade since the start of the genocide. Indeed, 9 convictions were handed down in Germany so far, including three for genocide. Recently, Sweden and France have initiated legal proceedings against alleged ISIL members for their involvement in crimes against Yazidis, signaling an important step in holding perpetrators accountable in a broader international context. However, the recent and abrupt closure of UNITAD on 17 September 2024 might jeopardize ongoing investigations and trials in third countries as the question of the accessibility of the evidence has still not been resolved. Natia Navrouzov, Executive Director at Yazda commented: "We commend the Dutch authorities and everyone who supported this case. Witnessing survivors follow the livestream of the verdict today from our offices in Duhok and Sinjar was a powerful reminder of the purpose behind our work, as it is ultimately for them. We are deeply proud of Z. and S., whose courage in coming forward made this case possible. While we are immensely relieved that Hasna A. has been convicted for her crimes, we had hoped the slavery charges concerning S. would also be fully acknowledged." ### Read the Arabic press release here. Download this English press release here. For media inquiries, please contact: Tonny Omondi Media and Communications Coordinator e: tonny.omondi@yazda.org About Yazda: Yazda is a non-governmental, non-profit organization that was established in 2014 in response to the genocide committed by the self-declared Islamic State (ISIS) against the Yazidis and other minorities in Iraq. Yazda manages a portfolio of humanitarian, justice, advocacy, and development-related projects, all of which are community and survivor-centered in terms of design and implementation. Since its inception, Yazda has been working with local and international partners to provide humanitarian, accountability, and advocacy services to vulnerable minority groups in Iraq in their post-genocide recovery. The organization has been operating in Iraq since October 2014 and has main offices in Duhok in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and a branch office in Sinjar in Nineveh Province. Yazda is registered as a non-profit organization in the United States, the United Kingdom, Iraq, Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Over the past 8 years, Yazda has grown to employ around 80 staff on average, received support from numerous donors, both institutional and individual, and has reached tens of thousands of direct and indirect beneficiaries through its programs and initiatives.
10 December 2024
December 10, 2024. IRAQ- Human Rights Watch and Yazda condemn the wave of hate speech which targeted the Yazidi community in Iraq and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI) in August 2024. We are concerned by these acts that threaten the peace, safety, and coexistence that the Iraqi society strives to maintain. Coinciding with the tenth anniversary of the Yazidi genocide committed by the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), Yazidis in Iraq have been again subjected to waves of disturbing languages advocating hatred and inciting violence, hostility and discrimination. Such rhetoric has fuelled online attacks, insults and threats of violence and incitement to violence, with some messages ultimately calling for another genocide. These attacks created a sentiment of fear in the Yazidi community which is still coping with the trauma related to the genocide committed by ISIL from August 2014 onwards. Many Yazidis have reached out to Civil Society Organizations in fear of imminent attacks, and hundreds of families left the Internally Displaced People (IDPs) camps in the Kurdistan region to return to Sinjar by fear of violence in the KRI. The surge in hate speech illustrates the unresolved and unaddressed discrimination and systemic violence faced by Yazidis and other ethnic and religious communities in Iraq. The root causes of hate and violence committed against minority and indigenous communities in Iraq have never been addressed by Iraqi and KRI authorities, to ensure the crimes committed against them are never repeated. Human Rights Watch and Yazda unequivocally denounce hate speech against any religious, racial or national groups, and stand firmly against extremism in all its forms. The undersigned call upon the Iraqi government, the Kurdistan Regional Government and all other relevant authorities to take immediate and decisive action to ensure the safety and security of all ethnic and religious groups in Iraq, including from hate speech and other violent acts: To the Iraqi Government: Adopt a comprehensive law on the protection of minority rights in Iraq, including protection from online violence and other forms of advocacy of hatred, in accordance with international law and standards while ensuring that they do not unlawfully restrict the right to freedom of expression and freedom of press. Fully implement the Yazidi Survivors Law and develop a comprehensive plan for the next 5 to 10 years on the transitional justice process in Iraq, establishing the truth over the crimes committed and tackling the root causes of hate. Promote awareness and education and ensure the inclusion, in the education programs, of information on all the ethnic and religious groups in Iraq, their religion, culture and history. Include, in the history curriculum, a dedicated chapter on the genocide and other crimes committed by ISIL against minority groups. The Ministry of Education should ensure the participation of all ethnic and religious minorities in the creation and review of this curriculum, to ensure accurate self-representation. Foster interfaith dialogue between the various religious and ethnic communities in Iraq, by facilitating open dialogues and awareness campaigns that challenge divisive and violent narratives and promote mutual respect. To the Kurdistan Regional Government: Enforce the Kurdistan Region's Law on Minority Rights by focusing on strengthening enforcement mechanisms essential to protecting minority groups. Ensure the protection of minorities from online violence and hate speech, while preserving freedom of speech, freedom of press and freedom of expression. The Ministry of Education should ensure the participation of all ethnic and religious minorities in the creation and review of this curriculum, to ensure accurate self-representation. Issue clear guidelines and ensure the provision of training by the Ministry of Endowment and Religious Affairs to religious leaders to counter stereotypes, eradicate discrimination and foster greater equality, including on ways of preventing hate speech and promoting the rights of minority groups. Ensure inclusion, in the education programs, of information on all the ethnic and religious groups in Iraq and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, their religion, culture and history. Include, in the history curriculum, a dedicated chapter on the genocide and other crimes committed by ISIL against minority groups. To META and other big tech companies: Take urgent steps to address instances of hate, racism and misinformation on online platforms to ensure that they do not cause or contribute to human rights abuses. Remove content including videos, posts, photos and comments that incite violence, hostility or discrimination against specific groups with protected characteristics and suspend the accounts of repeated offenders. Preserve an archive of human rights violations and abuses that may have evidentiary value, and provide access to data for independent researchers and investigators, including those in the fields of human rights, while protecting user privacy. Adequately staff and resource moderation teams must include staff fluent in various Arabic and Kurdish dialects and with a deep understanding of regional issues. The moderation teams and any automated tools they use must be trained to effectively reduce the spread of hate speech and violence in the different languages, including in Kurdish and Arabic. Engage meaningfully with organizations defending the right of the Yazidi community to develop policies and features, from design to implementation and enforcement, including on content moderation and trust and safety strategies that prioritize addressing incitement to violence, hostility, or discrimination against the Yazidi community. Companies should be proactively prepared to address waves of hate speech that may arise during particular times, including the commemoration of the genocide. To the International Community: Acknowledge and condemn the ongoing advocacy of hatred that incites violence and discrimination against the Yazidi community and monitor developments closely. Support the implementation of the Yazidi Survivors Law and additional transitional justice measures in Iraq and the KRI and support the passage of a law by the Iraqi Parliament on the protection of minority rights in Iraq. Ensure that the hate speech and other forms of violence and systemic discrimination faced by Yazdis in Iraq up until today are taken into account when assessing the protection claims of Yazidis. Support projects aiming at tackling the root causes of violence and hate through education, awareness and dialogue. Finally, we urge Iraqi citizens to stand in solidarity with the Yazidis and all minority groups, fostering an environment of mutual respect and peaceful coexistence. Iraq and the Kurdistan Region of Iraq’s strength lies in its diversity, and all actors should work together to protect and celebrate this diversity. Human Rights Watch and Yazda remain committed to continuing our efforts to promote human rights, justice, and reconciliation. Read this open letter in Arabic here . Download the English letter here . We look forward to receiving your inquiries at media@yazda.org
9 December 2024
Under Constant Threat: Yazda Launches Report on Hate Speech Targeting the Yazidi Community in Iraq and the Kurdistan Region, Urging Action from Both Governments and the International Community
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by Ahmed Burjus 14 March 2024
The release of this crucial report follows the UN Security Council (UNSC) resolution to extend the mandate of the Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Da’esh/ISIL ( UNITAD ) only until September 2024 ( UNSC resolution 2697/2023 ). The report reflects the concerns and recommendations of Iraqi NGOs and survivors' networks. Yazda, a member of the Coalition for Just Reparations ( C4JR ), joined an alliance of Iraqi NGOs in calling for comprehensive reparations for survivors of atrocity crimes perpetrated during the ISIL conflict in Iraq. In September 2023, prior to the passing of resolution 2697 by the UNSC, Yazda led the publication of a statement endorsed by 50 organizations expressing concerns about the imminent closure of UNITAD. Subsequently, within C4JR, Yazda facilitated consultations with NGOs online and in person, ensuring that their feedback was communicated to the UN, particularly in preparation for the UN Secretary-General's report released in January 2024 on Iraq’s request to receive UNITAD’s evidence. In parallel, Yazda consulted survivors’ networks, including Hope Givers, Survivors Voice Network (SVN), Speicher-1700 NGO, and the Yazidi Survivors Networks (YSN), incorporating their perspectives into the report. Natia Navrouzov, Executive Director at Yazda and co-author of the report, comments: “The report, especially its concrete recommendations, is a testament to the deep knowledge of Iraqi civil society on issues of justice and the lack thereof in Iraq. Iraqi organizations are the experts and should not be ignored. We advocated for the creation of UNITAD but were not involved in its termination. To this day, we have not been presented with a clear strategy from Iraq and the international community regarding the fate and more importantly, the use, of the evidence collected by UNITAD and what comes next. While UNITAD’s completion roadmap, due on 15 March 2024, may provide some answers, we were not meaningfully consulted on it either. Moving forward, we want to be part of the conversation and of the solution.” For the Arabic version of the Press Release, click here . For any inquiries, please contact info@yazda.org ### 300 North 27th Street, Suite C. - Lincoln, Nebraska 68503, USA info@yazda.org - www.yazda.org
by Ahmed Burjus 22 January 2024
22 January 2024 Ceremonies in Baghdad, Solagh and the three villages (Hardan, Kocho and Qney) On 22 January 2024, under the auspice of the Office of the Prime Minister and in the presence of Iraqi and international officials and Yazidi community members, a funeral will be held in Baghdad following the identification of 41 Yazidi victims from Hardan, Kocho and Qney. Following this national-wide ceremony, the remains of the victims will be taken to Sinjar where a local-led ceremony will be organized on 24 January 2024, at the recently inaugurated Yazidi Genocide Memorial in Solagh. During this ceremony, Yazidi religious rituals will be performed. The remains of the victims will be then handed over to their families to allow them to bury them in their respective villages of Hardan, Kocho and Qney. From 24 to 26 January 2024, mourning days will be observed in these three villages and members of the community will be able to visit and pay their respects. The return of the sixth batch of remains and ongoing exhumations The identification of the remains was carried out by the Iraqi Medico-Legal Department (MLD) of Iraqi Ministry of Health, with the assistance of the UN Investigative Team for Accountability of Da’esh/ISIL (UNITAD) and the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP). The UN-supported exhumation process in Sinjar started in March 2019 and is ongoing. So far, around 60 mass graves have been exhumed and around 20 still need to be opened. The mass graves in Kocho and Solagh were the first ones to be exhumed from March 2019, followed by Hardan in February 2022 and Qney in June 2022 . This is believed to be the sixth batch of remains of Yazidi victims to be returned to Sinjar and a total of 41 victims were identified. Previously, remains have been returned mainly to Kocho and Solagh and the identification process is still ongoing. Support provided by Yazda and partners As for previous ceremonies, Yazda and other organizations will accompany Yazidi community members during this extremely sensitive time. Yazda has been coordinating the process over the past months with the national authorities and members of the community as well as partners from the International Organization for Migration (IOM), UNITAD and Nadia’s Initiative which will be present to provide support during the ceremonies. From its side, Yazda will deploy different teams to the burial sites. Yazda’s Case Managers will be present to provide psychological support and Yazda’s Mobile Medical Unit will provide medical assistance to the community where needed. Yazda’s Documentation Team will film the official speeches, report on the ceremonies and interview the authorities and partners, including members of the MLD and representatives of UNITAD and ICMP. The community will be invited to provide feedback on the process and report any concerns. Yazda’s Investigation Coordinator and focal point for the event, Ismail Qasim comments: “We have been supporting the process of exhumations over the past 5 years at least and it is far from being done. The crime scenes left by ISIL are countless and necessite joint efforts from all stakeholders involved, including internationals. Therefore, it is crucial that Iraq continues its collaboration with entities such as UNITAD to support the affected communities to recover the remains and bury them in a dignified way." Yazda presents its condolences to all the affected families as well as the wider Yazidi community and reiterates its commitment to work tirelessly in the pursuit of justice and the truth. For the Arabic version of the Press Release, click here .
© Corporate compliance insights
by Ahmed Burjus 18 January 2024
Yazda welcomes the decision rendered on the 16 th January, 2024, by the Cour de Cassation, the French Supreme Court, confirming the indictment of Lafarge, now Holcim, for complicity in crimes against humanity. This decision echoes the landmark ruling in this case rendered in September 2021 , which held that any person can be indicted as an accomplice to crimes against humanity, if it knowingly provided support to the perpetrator of such crimes, even in the absence of intent to associate oneself with the commission of their crimes or to adhere to their criminal projects. With this new decision by the Cour de Cassation, the victims of the Syrian and Iraqi conflict are a step closer to justice for the horrors inflicted upon them by ISIS and other terror groups. This decision validates the gravity of the allegations against Lafarge and sends a strong signal that corporations must be held accountable for their actions, especially when they may contribute to crimes against humanity. “Yazda reiterates its commitment to seeking justice for the Yazidi community and other victims of ISIS. As a civil party in the Lafarge case, Yazda will continue to actively participate in the legal proceedings, in the pursuit of truth and accountability,” commented Natia Navrouzov, Legal Advocacy Director at Yazda. “This decision constitutes a significant milestone in these critically important proceedings, which will serve as a landmark for corporate accountability for international crimes. Despite numerous attempts by the defendants to obtain the dismissal of the charges of complicity of crimes against humanity on technicalities, we are now one step closer to having this case heard by a trial court and decided on its merits”, commented Luke Vidal, counsel for Yazda. For the Arabic version of the Press Release, click here . ### 300 North 27th Street, Suite C. - Lincoln, Nebraska 68503, USA info@yazda.org - www.yazda.org
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