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Ba’aj, Crimes against humanity, Daech, Daesh, foreign mercenaries, foreign-backed terrorists, Iraq, Iraq’s Kurdistan region, Iraqi Kurdistan, ISIL, ISIS, Izadi girls, Jihadists, Jihadists Prostitution, Jizya, Mosul, Rambusi, Sex Jihad, Sinjar, takfiri, Takfiri movements, Tal Afar, Tal Banat, Terrorism By Proxy, Terrorists Gangs, Wahhabi, Wahhabi perverts, War by Proxy, War crimes, War Criminals, War on Syria, War Strategy, Yazidi
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Izadi (Yazidi) women (11) and girls (9), released statements after they escaped from the Daesh’s captivity, in the northern town of Dohuk, in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, in January and February 2015.
In August, 2014, the ISIL (ISIS-DAESH) terrorist gangs took several thousand Izadi civilians into custody in the northern Iraqi province of Nineveh, separated the girls and women from their families, and transferred them to different strongholds of the terrorist group in Iraq and neighboring Syria.
DAESH is holding the Izadi captives in multiple locations across northern Iraq, including Mosul, Tal Afar, Tal Banat, Ba’aj, Rambusi, and Sinjar, and in areas it controls in eastern Syria, including Raqqa and Rabi’a.
They had been forced to marry the wahhabi perverts, sold several times, and given as “gifts.” Half of them, including two 12-yer-old girls, said that they had been raped several times by a number of barbarian militants.