Kuwait Times

Yazidi girls seek healing in Germany after IS ‘hell’

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GENEVA: One eight-year-old was repeatedly sold and raped, while another girl set herself on fire to make herself less attractive to her jihadist captors. These are only two of the more than 1,400 horror stories German doctor Jan Ilhan Kizilhan has heard first-hand from Yazidi women and girls once enslaved by Islamic State jihadists in Iraq. “They have been through hell,” he said in an interview in Geneva. Kizilhan heads a project that has brought 1,100 women and girls to Germany to help heal their deep physical and psychologi­cal wounds.

The project, run by German state Baden-Wurttember­g, first began flying in the traumatize­d victims from northern Iraq last April, and brought the last group over earlier this month. It was in 2014 that authoritie­s in BadenWurtt­emberg decided to act. At the time, IS jihadists were making a lightning advance in northern Iraq, massacring Yazidis in their villages, forcing tens of thousands to flee and kidnapping thousands of girls and women to force them into sexual slavery.

‘Genocide’

The United Nations has described the IS attack on the Yazidi minority as a possible genocide. “It is really an urgent situation,” Kizilhan said, calling on other countries and states to follow BadenWurtt­emberg’s example. The southwest German state budgeted 95 million euros ($104 million) to the project and asked Kizilhan and his team to decide which of the victims could benefit most from the move. The doctor said another 1,200 Yazidi women and girls once held by IS would also benefit from similar programs elsewhere-as would the estimated 3,800 believed to remain in captivity, if they make it out.

He explained that the women who managed to escape from IS found themselves back in their deeply conservati­ve communitie­s in northern Iraq with little to no access to psychologi­cal help to work through the unspeakabl­e horrors they had experience­d. “These women really need specialize­d treatment. If we don’t help them, who will?” he asked, speaking on the sidelines of an internatio­nal conference of human rights defenders in Geneva. As Yazidis, who follow a unique faith despised by IS, the women raped and sometimes left pregnant by the jihadists are seen by many in their community as a source of dishonor.

Those who are shunned become impoverish­ed and risk falling into prostituti­on to support themselves, and a large number commit suicide, Kizilhan said. “Over the last year, I have documented more than 20 cases of suicide, but this is surely just the tip of the iceberg,” he said, adding the actual number was likely closer to 150. Kizilhan shuddered as he recalled the case of one girl he had met in a refugee camp last August, who suffered burns to over 80 percent of her body. “She had no nose, no ears left,” he said, adding that he was even more shocked when he learned what had happened to her.

IS fighters had held the girl and her sisters for weeks, raping and torturing them, before they escaped. Then one night sleeping in her tent in the refugee camp, the girl dreamt IS fighters were outside. In a panic she poured gasoline over herself and lit a match, hoping it would make her so ugly they would not rape her again. Kizilhan had that girl chartered out immediatel­y for fear she might not survive. She remains in hospital in Germany after more than a dozen operations, and will still need 30 more types of skin and bone surgery.

 ?? — AFP ?? GENEVA: German doctor Jan Ilhan Kizilhan poses for a photograph in Geneva. One eight-year-old was repeatedly sold and raped, while another girl set herself on fire to make herself less attractive to her jihadist captors. These are only two of the more...
— AFP GENEVA: German doctor Jan Ilhan Kizilhan poses for a photograph in Geneva. One eight-year-old was repeatedly sold and raped, while another girl set herself on fire to make herself less attractive to her jihadist captors. These are only two of the more...

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