Harini Calamur
The Amnesty USA Report on “Torture and Sexual Slavery in Islamic State captivity in Iraq” makes
for difficult and brutal reading. Amnesty spoke to some of the 300
women and girls, from the Yazidi community who had managed to escape the
IS, and the accounts of systematic brutality, torture and rape of girls
and women are laid out in a matter of fact manner, that makes it even
more impactful.
Narrative after narrative focuses on the utter dehumanisation of prisoners and the treatment meted out to them.
A 15 year old girl Arwa, had this account :
“In Rambussi we were held in a house with five other girls. There
they did to me what they did to many other girls. I was raped. My cousin
was not molested; they wanted to take her to marry her to a man but in
the end they left her with us and then we managed to escape. One of the
girls said she was not raped but I don’t know if it is true; I hope it
is true. Another did not talk about what happened to her. The others
were raped. The men were all Iraqis. They said that if we killed
ourselves they would kill our relatives.”
A 16 year old, Randa, had this account:
“I was taken to Mosul and kept there all the time. First in a
building which they called the maqarr (headquarters). We were about 150
girls and five women. A man called Salwan took me from there to an
abandoned house. He also took my cousin, who is 13 years old; we
resisted and they beat us. He took me as his wife by force. I told him I
did not want to and tried to resist but he beat me. My nose was
bleeding, I could not do anything to stop him. I ran away as soon as I
could. Luckily they did not do anything to my cousin, did not force her
to marry, and she escaped with me. I went to a doctor here, who said
that I was not pregnant and didn’t have any disease, but I can’t forget
what happened to me.”
Girls were raped, sold into slavery, sold into ‘marriage’ – the
report is unclear as to what happened to the men. It is estimated that
hundreds of men were killed in the battle, or forced to convert under
the threat of death. The 300 women and girls who escaped, are the lucky
ones. It is estimated that 1000’s of women and girls are still being
held by the Islamic State and most are facing brutality and violence on
an ongoing basis. Most of the women were taken captive in August 2014
when the IS invaded the Sinjar regions of North West Iraq. According to
Amnesty, most of the families in this region have at least one family
member missing.
The IS preferred women and girls who were ‘beautiful’, as they did
girls who were virgins. One of the accounts by a girl who escaped :
““They kept bringing prospective buyers for us but luckily none of them
took us because we are not beautiful and we were always crying and
holding on to each other.”
Another escapee said, “My sister and I told them we were married but
they said they would bring a doctor to examine us and those who were
virgins and had lied about being married would be punished, so we
admitted that we were not married. If we had known that they were going
to kill us we would have continued to lie but we were afraid that we
would be raped....”
However, being married was no protection from being raped or sold:
“I had my little boy with me and my pregnancy was very visible
already but one of the guards chose me to be his wife. He said that if I
did not consent to marrying him he would sell me on to another man who
would take me to Syria. I let him believe that I would marry him and
managed to run away before he could carry out his threats ” is the
testimony of 19-year-old Abla, who was pregnant when she was taken
prisoner. Many of the young women committed suicide rather than face a
life of sexual slavery. The accounts of their death are chilling.
“Jilan killed herself in the bathroom. She cut her wrists and hanged
herself. She was very beautiful. I think she knew that she was going to
be taken away by a man and that is why she killed herself.”
Not all suicide attempts were successful. Wafa, 27, talks about her
unsuccessful attempt at suicide: “The man who was holding us said that
either we marry him and his brother or he would sell us. At night we
tried to strangle ourselves with our scarves. We tied the scarves around
our necks and pulled away from each other as hard as we could, until I
fainted. Two girls who were held with us woke up and stopped us and then
stayed awake to watch over us. When they fell asleep at 5am we tried
again, and again they woke up and stopped us. I could not speak for
several days after that.”
The women who escaped are so traumatised by their experience that
relatives fear that they may never heal, and watch over them in case
they commit suicide. The men who ‘purchased’ Yazidi girls and women,
were Iraqis and Syrians and from other Arab nations. They were not
necessarily fighters. And, the ‘marriages’ were registered at a shariah
court. One of the escapees said of her husband’s family “His wife was
very nice to us and felt sorry for us. She cried with us and wanted to
help but she couldn’t.” This is a tragedy on so many levels that it is
going to take generations of sustained work to restore some form of
rights to women in the region.
While the world collectively wrings its hands and wonders what can be
done, the IS is cutting a swathe through the region with tactics like
this, that spread fear. And, if we believe that this is against just the
Yazidi , we would be wrong. As the Amnesty report points out, the IS
kills everyone who is not like it and doesn’t support the Islamic state
– which means pretty much all sane people. IS “ carried out a
deliberate policy of ethnic cleansing in northern Iraq. It forced
hundreds of thousands of members of ethnic and religious minorities, who
had lived in the region for centuries – including Shi’a (who are a
minority in northern Iraq),Assyrian Christians, Turkmen Shi’a, Shabak
Shi’a, Yazidis, Kakai, and Sabean Mandaeans – to abandon their homes and
villages”.
The report makes for hard reading. But, read it, we must, because if
nothing else we owe it those who died, who are still in captivity, who
are slaves in a modern world. What the IS has committed, is war crimes.
But, how do you deal with a force that refuses to recognise the basic
rules of the modern world, and is hell bent on burning and destroying
everything that is not in the image of its own distorted view of the
universe? In a world where most modern Nation States are bound by basic
rules, which they may bend but not break, how do you deal with an
entity that follows none? The more one reads on this, the great fear is
that, the rest of the world has to sink to the same brutal levels to put
an end to this

Hairan kenapa penyeksaan terhadap kaum Rohingya ta di gembar gembur oleh Amerika dan sekutu sekutu mereka.?
ReplyDeleteIni yg buat sy ta yakin dengan media Barat