- [Closed Access] Read the final peer-reviewed paper: doi.org/10.1163/9789004466180_006
- [Open Access] Read the full manuscript: zenodo.org/record/5595882
- [Open Access] Read the original report: doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3826125
JOINT PRESS RELEASE Link to heading
Seven years after the beginning of the 2014 genocide committed by the Islamic State against the Êzidîs (‘Yazidis’ or ‘Yezidis’) the final report of a joint investigation conducted by RASHID International, Yazda and the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa Project (EAMENA) has been released. The results were published in Volume 5 of the peer-reviewed Asian Yearbook of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (AYHR), an international human rights periodical edited by Professor Javaid Rehman, the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in Iran.
International attention concerning the genocide has generally focused on murder, slavery and sexual exploitation. We analyzed the destruction of Êzidî tangible and intangible cultural heritage as a significant facet of the Islamic State’s policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide. Evidence of destruction is collected and presented in context with other criminal acts.
The Êzidî are an endogamous community at home in northern Iraq for whom faith and ethnic belonging are inextricably linked. Belief in God and Tawûsê Malek (the highest angel), and reverence for Lalish as the holiest place on earth are the defining features of the Êzidî faith. Historic and sacred places are an essential part of the Êzidî identity and are considered vital to life by the local population. The Islamic State made no secret of its intention to eradicate the Êzidî community and commenced a policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide on 3 August 2014. All victims were abused and tortured. Male Êzidîs above the age of 12 were killed. Female Êzidîs were enslaved and traded in a complex and public network of sexual slavery. Boys were trained in ISIS camps and militarized. Those who fled to Mount Sinjar were besieged in order to ensure death from starvation, thirst and the blazing sun. Bases of economic support, such as olive groves and irrigation wells, were systematically destroyed and many areas of the Êzidî homeland were sown with landmines and improvised explosive devices (IEDs) to prevent the population from returning.
The peer-reviewed AYHR publication provides original research, evidence and context on the destruction of Êzidî tangible cultural heritage in the Bahzani/Bashiqa and Sinjar areas of northern Iraq. We present satellite imagery analysis conducted by the EAMENA project, drawing on data provided by Êzidî representatives. According to the Department of Yazidi Affairs in the Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs in the Kurdistan Regional Government 68 Êzidî sites were destroyed by the Islamic State. We consider 16 sites in the Bahzani/Bashiqa area and 8 in the Sinjar area to which access was possible and which could be documented.
The destruction of cultural heritage sites is most often considered a war crime. Several convictions by the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and the conviction of Malian Islamist Al-Mahdi by the International Criminal Court (ICC) are well-known. However, heritage destruction may also be prosecuted as the crime of persecution, a crime against humanity. Numerous indictments and convictions before international courts attest to the viability of this approach. Finally, grounded in explicit case law of the International Court of Justice (ICJ), destruction of tangible heritage also serves as evidence of the special intent to destroy a protected group under the crime of genocide.
We conclude that the destruction of the cultural heritage of the Êzidî people constituted a war crime, a crime against humanity (persecution) and compelling evidence of genocidal intent. We recommend the consideration of cultural heritage destruction in any prosecution of atrocity crimes, especially the crime of genocide.
Online Availability Link to heading
The final report is intended to be read in conjunction with the original 2019 report, which includes extensive ground imagery and site descriptions to provide additional context.
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2021 Final Article (peer-reviewed, subscription required): https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004466180_006
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2021 Manuscript (peer-reviewed, open access): https://zenodo.org/record/5595882
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2019 Original Report (open access): https://doi.org/10.5281/zenodo.3826125
Contact Link to heading
For further inquiries, please contact Chief Legal Officer Seán Fobbe (legal@rashid-international.org).
Example Citation Link to heading
Fobbe, Seán, Natia Navrouzov, Kristen Hopper, Ahmed Khudida Burjus, Graham Philip, Maher G Nawaf, Daniel Lawrence, Helen Walasek, Sara Birjandian, Majid Hassan Ali, Salim Rashidani, Hassan Salih, Dawood Sulaiman Qari, and Faris Mishko. ‘Cultural Heritage Destruction during the Islamic State’s Genocide against the Yazidis’. In The Asian Yearbook of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (pp. 111-144). Brill Nijhoff. DOI: https://doi.org/10.1163/9789004466180_006.
About RASHID International Link to heading
RASHID International is a worldwide network of archaeologists and cultural heritage experts dedicated to safeguarding and promoting the cultural heritage of Iraq, ancient Mesopotamia. To assist our Iraqi colleagues, we collect and share information, research and expert knowledge, work to raise public awareness, and both develop and execute strategies to protect heritage sites and other cultural property through international cooperation, advocacy and technical assistance.
We are registered as a non-profit organisation in Germany and enjoys charitable tax-exempt status under German law. We are an organisation in special consultative status with the United Nations Economic and Social Council since 2019. Learn more about our work at www.rashid-international.org.
About Yazda Link to heading
Yazda is a global community-led institution that protects and champions all religious and ethnic minority communities, including Assyrians, Chaldeans, Kakais, Shabak, Turkmen, and Yazidis in Iraq, Kurdistan Region, and Syria. Founded in 2014 at the onset of the genocide perpetuated by Da’esh, also known as the Islamic State in Iraq and Levant (ISIL), against the Yazidis, as well as war crimes and crimes against humanity against other minorities, Yazda leads advocacy and strategic projects in Dohuk, Sinjar, and the Nineveh Plains, as well as global diaspora hubs.
We work hand-in-hand with our partners, including United Nations agencies, key donor governments, the Iraqi and Kurdistan Regional Governments, and instrumental community organizations to ensure justice, accountability, and a sustainable future for all is swiftly reached. We are fervently determined to ensure Never Again, so that no community and people ever face genocide. Learn more about our work at www.yazda.org.
About EAMENA Link to heading
The EAMENA Project rapidly records and evaluates the status of the archaeological landscape of the MENA region in order to create an accessible body of data which can be used by national and international heritage professionals to target those sites most in danger and better plan and implement the preservation and protection of this heritage. The EAMENA project is a collaboration between the Universities of Oxford, Leicester and Durham in the United Kingdom and is supported by the Arcadia Fund and the British Council’s Cultural Protection Fund. Learn more about our work at www.eamena.org.