Yazidi IS survivors win EU’s Sakharov human rights prize

Yazidi IS survivors win EU’s Sakharov human rights prize

FPJ BureauUpdated: Thursday, May 30, 2019, 11:44 AM IST
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(FILES) This file photo taken on June 21, 2016 shows Nadia Murad, human rights activist, testifying during Senate Homeland Security and Governmental Affairs Committee hearing on Capitol Hill, in Washington, DC. Two Yazidi women activists who escaped the Islamic State group in Iraq have been awarded the European Parliament's prestigious Sakharov human rights prize for this year on October 27, 2016, European sources told AFP. The prize will go to Nadia Murad and Lamia Haji Bashar -- who campaign to protect their Yazidi people and were enslaved by IS -- during a midday session of the assembly in Strasbourg, France, the sources told AFP. / AFP PHOTO / GETTY IMAGES NORTH AMERICA / MARK WILSON |

Strasbourg (France) : Two Yazidi women who survived a nightmare ordeal of kidnapping, rape and slavery at the hands of Islamic State jihadists won the European Parliament’s prestigious Sakharov human rights prize, reports AFP.

  Nadia Murad and Lamia Haji Bashar have become figureheads for the effort to protect the Yazidis, followers of an ancient religion with more than half a million believers concentrated in northern Iraq.

“They have a painful and tragic story” but “they felt compelled to survive to bear witness,” European Parliament chief Martin Schulz told the assembly in Strasbourg. “The courage of these two women, the dignity they represent defies all description.” According to UN experts, around 3,200 Yazidis are currently being held by IS, the majority of them in war- ravaged Syria.

Given each year by the European Parliament, the award is named after the dissident Soviet scientist Andrei Sakharov, who died in 1989, and honours individuals who combat intolerance, fanaticism and oppression, often falling foul of their governments as a result.  Murad, a slight, softly spoken young woman, was taken by IS from her home village of Kocho near Iraq’s northern town of Sinjar in August 2014 and brought to the city of Mosul.  As a captive of the reviled extremist group, Murad, who  is 23, said she was tortured and raped. Bashar, who was just 16 when she was taken and is also from Kocho, witnessed family and friends being slaughtered by IS jihadists before being enslaved and sold. After 20 months in captivity she escaped but then fell into the hands of an Iraqi hospital director who also abused and raped her and several other victims.  In a final tragedy, Bashar suffered horrific burns to her face and lost her right eye when one of her friends stepped on a landmine following their flight from the hospital director.

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