Iraq’s Yazidi community buries 104 victims of IS massacre

Iraq's Yazidi community buries 104 victims of IS massacre
Their remains had been identified and exhumed from mass graves. Source: GETTY IMAGES
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Daily US Times: The Yazidi community of northern Iraq has brought home 104 of its members who were killed by the Islamic State (IS) group during its reign of terror in 2014.

Their remains had been identified and exhumed from mass graves, and they were laid to rest in the village of Kocho near Mount Sinjar in Ninevah province.

Thousands of men were killed and children and women enslaved and raped when IS overran the Yazidi’s homeland.

The United Nations says IS carried out genocide against the community.

The 104 were all men who had been killed by IS militants in August 2014, Khairi Ali Ibrahim, the head of the Yazidi Organisation for Documentation, was quoted as saying.

A funeral was held for them at the Unknown Soldier memorial in Baghdad on Thursday before they were brought home to Kocho.

Each coffin was adorned with a photo of the man who had been lost.

Yazidi human rights activist Mirza Dinnayi said: “This is a first step in respecting the remains of these victims and it will be also a step of transitional justice that the other victims, the women, the children, who survived the genocide will be compensated.”

There were believed to be an estimated 550,000 Yazidis living in Iraq before Islamic State invaded on 3 August 2014. Some 360,000 Yazidis escaped and found refuge elsewhere.

In July, Amnesty International said that some 2,000 Yazidi children who had survived brutal captivity at the hands of the IS were still not getting the care they needed and were suffering severe physical and mental health problems.

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