Are the Yazidis any closer to justice?
Ten years ago thousands of Yazidis were killed and enslaved by Islamic State group.
Ten years ago, in 2014, militants belonging to the Islamic State group in Iraq killed and captured thousands of Yazidi people in what would later be called a genocide. It鈥檚 understood that hundreds of women are still missing, and are being held as sex and domestic slaves across the Middle East. One was recently found in Gaza.
Since then there have only been a handful of court cases - mostly in European courts - but survivors are still fighting for justice. Caroline Hawley, a 麻豆社 diplomatic correspondent, talks us through the detail. We also hear from Nobel Peace Prize winner Nadia Murad who, at 21, was abducted into sexual slavery when IS militants surrounded her Yazidi community in the Sinjar region. Since her miraculous escape she has been advocating for survivors of genocide and sexual violence through her organisation Nadia鈥檚 Initiative.
Trigger warning: the material in this episode can be disturbing and quite hard to hear. If you are sensitive to content about physical and sexual violence, or if you believe that you might find the discussion to be triggering, this episode may not be right for you.
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Presenter: Hannah Gelbart
Producers: Mora Morrison and Hayley Clarke
Editor: Verity Wilde
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- Wed 23 Oct 2024 17:50GMT麻豆社 World Service News Internet
- Thu 24 Oct 2024 02:50GMT麻豆社 World Service East and Southern Africa, South Asia, West and Central Africa & East Asia only
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