Duhok, 27 July 2023
Nine years after the so-called Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) targeted the Yazidi community and other groups in Iraq, Yazda releases a report to focus on child-centered documentation, investigation, prosecution, and broader transitional justice processes. To support the preparation of this report, Justice Rapid Response (JRR) deployed to Yazda a JRR rostered expert on children's rights who provided technical support.
From June 2014 ISIL targeted and attacked the populations of the Nineveh Plains in Northern Iraq, especially minority groups, including Christians, Kakais, Shabakhs and Turkmens. On the 3rd of August 2014, ISIL attacked the Sinjar area and carried out heinous crimes against the Yazidi community, including genocide, crimes against humanity, and war crimes. Half of all Yazidis executed were children, and most Yazidis held captive by ISIL were children.
In the words of a young Yazidi male survivor:
“ISIL kidnapped children. They wanted us to never see our families again, to be constantly by their side, supporting them,
engaging in their fights, and even sacrificing ourselves for them”
Yet, children and young people remain invisible in accountability and transitional justice processes. Most of them are designed without considering their specific needs and identifying them as individual rights holders. This is true for Yazidi children whose stories Yazda has been documenting since the inception of its documentation project in early 2015.
While the crimes committed against children are numerous and require a specific approach, the report highlights the shortcomings in their handling to date and proposes some solutions. The report gives Yazidi children, most of whom are young adults now, a voice based on their testimonies and Yazda’s continuous engagement with them.
The report’s findings suggest:
- ISIL committed various abuses, violations and crimes against Yazidi children amounting to genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes. These include forced transfer; recruitment and conscription of children under 15; rape; sexual slavery; enforced prostitution; forced pregnancy; enforced sterilization; torture, and cruel, degrading and inhuman treatment.
- Gender norms and pre-existing forms of discrimination impacted ISIL's targeting of children and inform how children and young people are impacted by the crimes today.
- Crimes against and affecting children are under-documented, investigated and prosecuted. Local and international actors need to adopt a child-focused and child-centered approach when it comes to investigations and prosecutions.
The report also provides a set of recommendations addressed to the Government of Iraq (GoI), the Kurdistan Region of Iraq (KRI), and the international community. These recommendations were prepared based on input from Yazidi children and young people.
Some of the more pressing ones include:
- Urgent steps should be taken to identify and rescue missing Yazidi children by the GoI and KRI.
- For government to establish transitional justice processes that specifically address and prioritise Yazidi children, including investigating and documenting crimes against and affecting them. These processes should apply child-centered documentation and investigation standards. Children should be able to participate in safe ways and given appropriate support.
- To enforce domestic law that already considers international children’s rights and ensure child-specific crimes are prosecuted domestically. Iraq should also incorporate Rome Statute crimes into its domestic law.
- The Yazidi Survivors’ Law (YSL), which provides for reparations, should consider Yazidi children and young people’s needs more. This includes ensuring they have access to the full monthly salary and rehabilitation services, such as tailored medical and mental health supports, and access to education. Support also needs to be provided to their parents and caregivers.
To launch the report, Yazda hosted a workshop today attended by young Yazidi boys and girls who participated in the drafting of the report. Representatives from the UN, the Iraqi government, and NGOs were also present.
This report is only the starting point. Child-centered approaches for rehabilitating Yazidi children and young people are critical and must be implemented. Children are the future of their community, and their active participation and inclusion is essential.
Read the report here.
For the Arabic version, click here.
Download the Press Release here.
For the Arabic version, click here.
Natia Navrouzov, Legal Advocacy Director
e: natia.navrouzov@yazda.org
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