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Iraq Crisis : Updates on ISIS Genocide of minority Yezidis

Allah doesn't fight with stones he does it his way which is always the punishment of the same kind of sin some one commit.

Kurds, yezidis, sunis, turks, americans, europeans and the arabs all helped isis against the shea they thought this way they push us for full civil war against sunnis who supported isis this way they all sit back and watch the killing of iraqis each other plus the distruction of iraq the same way they did in syria!!!! but guess what the shea were smarter they absorbed daesh and baath attack without replying back with full slaughter, they just know how to bring those isis supporters to feel the little pain then to deal with isis.

now you have to enjoy isis slaying your people, bed you made you sleep on it.
 
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Allah doesn't fight with stones he does it his way which is always the punishment of the same kind of sin some one commit.

Kurds, yezidis, sunis, turks, americans, europeans and the arabs all helped isis against the shea they thought this way they push us for full civil war against sunnis who supported isis this way they all sit back and watch the killing of iraqis each other plus the distruction of iraq the same way they did in syria!!!! but guess what the shea were smarter they absorbed daesh and baath attack without replying back with full slaughter, they just know how to bring those isis supporters to feel the little pain then to deal with isis.

now you have to enjoy isis slaying your people, bed you made you sleep on it.

PKK/YPG Kurds have been fighting ISIS in Rojava, Northern Syria since its inception

Morning Star :: Rojava: a beacon of hope fighting Isis
 
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PKK/YPG Kurds have been fighting ISIS in Rojava, Northern Syria since its inception

Morning Star :: Rojava: a beacon of hope fighting Isis

IS didnt attack on YPG with full force. Why? Because of ethnic structure, it would be difficult to hold non-Arab territory while fighting on several fronts. In case of defeating Assad or Iraqi government, IS can concentrate on the north. Then we can talk.

Btw YPG is rag tag militia, most advanced weaponry they have are RPG-7 and SVD.
 
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IS didnt attack on YPG with full force. Why? Because of ethnic structure, it would be difficult to hold non-Arab territory while fighting on several fronts. In case of defeating Assad or Iraqi government, IS can concentrate on the north. Then we can talk.

Btw YPG is rag tag militia, most advanced weaponry they have are RPG-7 and SVD.

so ISIS ideology of killing all infidels in Sham and establishing the Caliphate is based on demographic composition and avoid multiple fronts ?
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Kurdish Activists ‘Convert’ to Yezidis in Act of Solidarity

ERBIL, Kurdistan Region - In an act of solidarity with Yezidis made homeless and persecuted en masse by the Islamic State (IS/formerly ISIS) in Iraq, dozens of Kurdish intellectuals and activists announced they have symbolically converted to the faith.

“We become Yezidis to show the radical Muslims that their genocidal campaign would only increase the number of Yezidis in Kurdistan,” said a group of 48 intellectuals and activists in a joint statement.

They said that the Yezidis are “subjected to savage attacks only because they have a different religion.”

“Because of their non-Muslim faith they are killed en masse, their girls and women are enslaved and many of them have been forcefully converted to Islam,” their statement read.

IS militants attacked the Yezidi town of Shingal early this month, killing several hundred civilians and displacing tens of thousands to Mount Shingal, where many died of hunger and thirst.

“I feel like a Yezidi,” pronounced Frmesk Mustafa, a Kurdish actress. “I am one of them,” she said.

Mustafa, who has returned to Kurdistan to work with Yezidi refugees, said: “The aim is to make them return the girls. And to show that Yezidis have to remain with their faith without fear.”

The activists stressed in their statement that the Kurdistan Region has no room forreligious intolerance, and that Yezidis are welcome as members of Kurdish society.

“One of the prides of the people of Kurdistan is their belief in religious and ethnic diversity where every individual can live together,” they said.

The group called on the people of Kurdistan, Iraq and the world to become Yezidis, albeit symbolically, in solidarity with the small and persecuted community.

“We want to tell the Yezidis and the people of the world that we will not leave the Yezidis to face a genocide alone,” read the statement.
 
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For Yazidis, Exile From Spiritual Homeland in Iraq Dilutes Ancient Culture

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Most of the Yazidis who were on the mountain are now in makeshift camps in the governorate of Dahuk and other parts of Iraqi Kurdistan. Some 450 displaced families are staying in Lalish.

With the initial emergency over, the news cycle has moved on from the tragedy of the Yazidis, as it invariably does. But the fate of this community remains uncertain.

Entire villages have been emptied, their residents left to ponder if or when they can safely return. Some are contemplating migration, severing ties to a land they deem holy. Others are determined to stay and protect their shrines.
 
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Last month, we were all shocked by the plight of Yazidi families stranded without food, water or shelter on Sinjar Mountain in Iraq. What happened next is a little known but astounding story.

After escaping Sinjar, thousands of Yazidi families journeyed all the way from Iraq to Nawrouz refugee camp in the neighbouring country of Syria to find safety from armed groups. Many suffered from dehydration, exposure, malnourishment and shock. Some gave horrifying accounts of killing, abduction and sexual violence perpetrated against women and children.

These boys survived the long journey in extreme temperatures of up to 45 degrees, finally making it to food, water and shelter.

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UNICEF and partners handed out high energy biscuits, hygiene kits and clothes to children who arrived in terrible states. After so long without food, this boy was checked for malnutrition.

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© UNICEF Syria/2014/Razan Rashidi

More than 500 tents were set up, giving a little relief from the oppressive sun, but as thousands of refugees continued to pour into the camp conditions became more and more difficult.

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© UNICEF Syria/2014/Razan Rashidi

Many of the Yazidi refugees decided to make their way to Dohuk Governorate, part of Iraq’s northern Kurdistan Region. This elderly woman made the gruelling journey on foot with a 13-day-old child in her arms.

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© UNICEF/NYHQ2014-1245/Khuzaie
They were greeted at the Iraq border by UNICEF workers offering help.

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© UNICEF/NYHQ2014-1255/Khuzaie

It's hard to imagine what the children had been through but their weary, dust-covered faces and matted hair say enough.
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Finally, a burst of fresh water let these kids wash themselves clean and enjoy a brief moment of fun.

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© UNICEF/NYHQ2014-1253/Khuzaie

There are now more than 400,000 internally displaced people in Dohuk and their future is still uncertain. The violation of their human rights has been one of the worst we've seen this century and, after leaving everything behind in the search for safety, their needs remain immense.
- See more at: After Sinjar Mountain: photos of the incredible journey | UNICEF Australia
 
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