(Reuters) - The 
new U.N. human rights chief called on Monday for the world to protect 
women and minorities targeted by Islamic State militants in Iraq and Syria which he said were "increasingly conjoined conflicts". Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein,
 Jordan's former U.N. ambassador, in a hard-hitting maiden speech to the
 U.N. Human Rights Council, said any country run by Islamic State "would
 be a harsh, mean-spirited, house of blood". Islamic State's Sunni Muslim fighters have over-run large parts of Syria and Iraq
 since June, declaring a cross-border caliphate. The Geneva-based 
Council last week agreed to send a team to investigate crimes committed 
by the group on "an unimaginable scale". "In
 particular, dedicated efforts are urgently needed to protect religious 
and ethnic groups, children – who are at risk of forcible recruitment 
and sexual violence – and women, who have been the targets of severe 
restrictions," Zeid told the forum. He
 also called on Iraq's new government and prime minister to consider 
joining the International Criminal Court (ICC) to ensure accountability 
for crimes committed there.         Zeid described ISIL as "takfiris" - people who justify killing others by branding them as apostates. "In
 the takfiri mind, as we have seen in Nigeria, Afghanistan, Pakistan, 
Yemen, Kenya, Somalia, Mali, Libya, Syria and Iraq, and throughout the 
world where they have attacked innocent people, including on 9/11, there
 is no love of neighbour - only annihilation to those Muslims, 
Christians, Jews and others, altogether the rest of humanity, who 
believe differently to them," Zeid said. In
 wide-ranging remarks, he called for an end to Israel's seven-year 
blockade of Gaza and said Palestinians in Gaza and the West Bank 
deserved to lead a normal life free of illegal settlements and what he 
called excessive use of force.
New U.N. rights boss urges world to protect women in Iraq, Syria
 
 
			Zaman Al Wasl
                
				
					
				 
				 
								 
								 
								 
								 
								 
								 
								 
								
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