The UN expresses concern about the rapid closure by the Iraqi authorities of the camp for ISIS families, where more than 300 families lived

2023/04/1500-1682144563.jpg
Read: 1206     15:00     22 Апрель 2023    

The international organisation's office in Baghdad stated that the removal of the Jada 5 facility in the northern city of Qayyarah was carried out without proper notification or preparation.

Reports from Yazidi human rights NGOs to the UN indicated that ISIL families were supported by the state and relocated to Yazidi regions.  

According to local Yazidi media reports, ISIS terrorist families are being relocated to areas that are home of Yazidis. Locals are not happy with this neighbourhood, as there have been repeated cases of Yazidi minority members being killed by ISIS family camp residents, and ISIS ideology continues to be practiced in these camps.

Local Yazidi residents say that some of them have had "interactions" with ISIS families from the camps, they claim that ISIS' wives and children are a time bomb, as the younger generation of terrorist families make no secret of the fact that "the time will come and what their parents did not do, they will do themselves, thereby destroying all Yazidis".

In Iraq, there are so-called state-supported humanitarian organisations that care for ISIS families as if they were innocent, turning a blind eye to the fact that Yazidi women are still enslaved in their families. One such pro-IGIL humanitarian group opposed the closure of ISIS family camps fearing that they believed vulnerable terrorist families, including many women and children, would find it difficult to integrate into the new cities and would be stigmatized for their perceived or real association with ISIS fighters. Each family of ISIS terrorists has been given 1.5 million Iraqi dinars (about $1,030) to find new housing.

Baghdad began a policy of closing displaced persons camps across the country in late 2020, hoping it would speed up the state's reconstruction after it was devastated by the fighting.

Most such facilities have since been dismantled, with the exception of those in the semi-autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan, and Jada 1 in Qayyar, which houses ISIL-affiliated prisoners who were previously held in the neighbouring Syrian Al-Hawl camp.

Dengê Êzdia 





Tags: #yezidis   #yazidis   #sindjar   #shangal   #ezidi   #humanrights  



The UN expresses concern about the rapid closure by the Iraqi authorities of the camp for ISIS families, where more than 300 families lived

2023/04/1500-1682144563.jpg
Read: 1207     15:00     22 Апрель 2023    

The international organisation's office in Baghdad stated that the removal of the Jada 5 facility in the northern city of Qayyarah was carried out without proper notification or preparation.

Reports from Yazidi human rights NGOs to the UN indicated that ISIL families were supported by the state and relocated to Yazidi regions.  

According to local Yazidi media reports, ISIS terrorist families are being relocated to areas that are home of Yazidis. Locals are not happy with this neighbourhood, as there have been repeated cases of Yazidi minority members being killed by ISIS family camp residents, and ISIS ideology continues to be practiced in these camps.

Local Yazidi residents say that some of them have had "interactions" with ISIS families from the camps, they claim that ISIS' wives and children are a time bomb, as the younger generation of terrorist families make no secret of the fact that "the time will come and what their parents did not do, they will do themselves, thereby destroying all Yazidis".

In Iraq, there are so-called state-supported humanitarian organisations that care for ISIS families as if they were innocent, turning a blind eye to the fact that Yazidi women are still enslaved in their families. One such pro-IGIL humanitarian group opposed the closure of ISIS family camps fearing that they believed vulnerable terrorist families, including many women and children, would find it difficult to integrate into the new cities and would be stigmatized for their perceived or real association with ISIS fighters. Each family of ISIS terrorists has been given 1.5 million Iraqi dinars (about $1,030) to find new housing.

Baghdad began a policy of closing displaced persons camps across the country in late 2020, hoping it would speed up the state's reconstruction after it was devastated by the fighting.

Most such facilities have since been dismantled, with the exception of those in the semi-autonomous region of Iraqi Kurdistan, and Jada 1 in Qayyar, which houses ISIL-affiliated prisoners who were previously held in the neighbouring Syrian Al-Hawl camp.

Dengê Êzdia 





Tags: #yezidis   #yazidis   #sindjar   #shangal   #ezidi   #humanrights