Yezidi Children Freed From Is Haunted by Health Crisis: Amnesty

Fleeing Yezidis cross the border from Iraqi into Syria in 2014 after their villages were attacked by Islamic State. Photo: Ahmad al-Rubaye/AFP

Nearly 2,000 Yezidi children freed from the grips of the Islamic State group in recent years are still trapped by psychological and physical trauma, Amnesty International warned on Thursday.

In a new report based on dozens of interviews in northern Iraq, the rights group found that 1,992 children who faced torture, forced conscription, rape, and other abuses at the hands of IS were not getting the care they need.

“While the nightmare of their past has receded, hardships remain for these children,” said Matt Wells, deputy director of Amnesty’s crisis response team.

The Yezidis are an ethno-religious minority numbering around 550,000 in their heartland of northwest Iraq before IS swept through the rugged region in 2014.

Slamming the Yezidis as heretics, IS slaughtered thousands of men, abducted women and girls, and forced boys to fight on its behalf.

Yezidi children were forcibly converted to Islam and taught Arabic, banned from speaking their native Kurdish.

To this day, child survivors suffer “debilitating long-term injuries,” as well as post-traumatic stress disorder, mood swings, aggression, and flashbacks.

Yezidi children interviewed by AFP last year in a displacement camp in the northwest district of Duhok played aggressively, wore all black, and spoke Arabic to each other, even months after they were freed from IS.

One of them, a 10-year-old girl, had threatened to commit suicide multiple times, her mother told AFP.

Sahir, a 15-year-old former IS child soldier, told Amnesty that he knew he needed mental support to cope with his trauma but felt he had nowhere to turn.

“What I was looking for is just someone to care about me, some support, to tell me, ‘I am here for you’,” he said. “This is what I have been looking for, and I have never found it.”

‘Accept Our Children’

Amnesty said access to education could help ease children back into society, but tens of thousands of Yezidis still live in displacement camps where schooling is irregular.

Many have also gone into debt from paying thousands of US dollars to smugglers to free Yezidi relatives who were held by IS.

Yezidi mothers forcibly wed to IS fighters are struggling to heal their own psychological scars while dealing with the stigma of having children born to jihadist fathers.

“I want to tell (our community) and everyone in the world, please accept us, and accept our children… I didn’t want to have a baby from these people. I was forced to have a son,” said 22-year-old Janan.

Many Yezidi women who were rescued from IS’ last bastion in Syria over the last two years were forced to leave their IS-born children behind when they returned to their families in neighboring Iraq.

“We have all thought about killing ourselves, or tried to do it,” said Hanan, a 24-year-old Yezidi whose daughter was taken from her.

Mothers must be reunited with their children and no further separation should take place, Amnesty said.

“These women were enslaved, tortured and subjected to sexual violence. They should not suffer any further punishment,” said Wells.

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