The United Nations said on Thursday Islamic State forces may have committed genocide in trying to wipe out the Yazidi minority in Iraq as well as war crimes against civilians including children. In a report based on
interviews with more than 100 alleged victims and witnesses, the U.N.
Human Rights Office urged the U.N. Security Council to refer the issue
to the International Criminal Court (ICC) to prosecute perpetrators,
including foreign members of the ultra-radical insurgent group. Iraqi
security forces and affiliated militias "may have committed some war
crimes" while battling the insurgency, including killings, torture and
abductions, the report said. "Clearly
international war crimes and crimes against humanity and possibly
genocide appear to have been committed during this conflict. The
genocide part relates particularly to the Yazidis," Hanny Megally, chief
of the Asia, Pacific, Middle East and North Africa branch of the U.N.
Human Rights Office, told a news briefing in Geneva. "We
are very keen to ensure that even as the conflict continues that
evidence is preserved, protected and collected because that will be
important for future accountability." The
U.N. investigators urged the Baghdad government to join the Hague-based
ICC or pursue the crimes under domestic law.The U.N. Human Rights
Council launched its inquiry in September after Islamic State, also
known as ISIS, ISIL or IS, seized large swathes of northern and western Iraq. There
was a "manifest pattern of attacks" by Islamic State on Yazidis, viewed
as "pagans" by IS, as well as Christians and other ethnic and religious
minorities as its forces laid siege to towns and villages in Iraq, the report said. "No community has been spared in Iraq from ISIL's violence....Essentially what we are seeing is the rich ethnic and religious diversity in Iraq that has been shattered completely," said Suki Nagra, chief U.N. investigator. A
"huge number of foreign fighters" were implicated in the atrocities,
largely from neighbouring countries, but also a few Western states, she
said, declining to be specific. Unofficial
estimates have put the number of Yazidis killed by IS militants in the
hundreds. Nagra gave no figures on this, but said roughly 3,000 women,
children and some men remained in IS custody. "This is an area that
needs future investigation." She added that mass graves were being uncovered in areas recently retaken by Iraqi government forces from Islamic State. U.N.
investigators also cited allegations that Islamic State had used
chlorine gas, a prohibited chemical weapon, against Iraqi soldiers in
the western province of Anbar in September. Islamic
State has treated captured women and children as "spoils of war", often
subjecting them to rape or sexual slavery, the report added. It
said the insurgents' Islamic sharia courts in Mosul had meted out cruel
punishments including stoning and amputation. "Thirteen teenage boys
were sentenced to death for watching a football match," the report said.
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