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Victims of Islamic State group sexual violence must see justice - UN

The report says that women and girls from Yazidi and other minority communities have been vulnerable to abuses of human rights
An image grab taken from a video release by the Iraqi federal police shows an 11-year-old Yazidi girl who was reportedly kidnapped and sold as a slave by the Islamic State group in 2014 after she was freed by Iraqi forces on 20 April 2017 (AFP)

Iraq must ensure that women and girls subjected to sexual violence at the hands of Islamic State group (IS) militants have access to justice and reparations, UN investigators said on Tuesday.

Thousands of people, predominantly from Iraq’s ethnic and religious minorities, have been subjected to sexual violence since IS militants swept across vast swathes of Iraq in 2014. The report pays particular attention to members of the country’s Yazidi community, who were kidnapped and forcibly converted, enslaved or conscripted to fight for the militants.

"Women and girls under the control of ISIL, in particular women from the Yazidi and other minority communities, have been especially vulnerable to abuses of human rights and violation of international humanitarian law," the report by the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq and the UN human rights office said.

More than 6,800 Yazidis were kidnapped by IS. About 3,000 of them are still believed to be held captive.

Victims must be provided with access to appropriate medical, psychosocial and financial support, the report said.

"The physical, mental, and emotional injuries inflicted by ISIL are almost beyond comprehension. If victims are to rebuild their lives, and indeed those of their children, they need justice and they need redress," said UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Ra’ad al-Hussein.

The report, based on interviews with survivors, found that support for the victims must come with significant changes to the criminal justice system to prove effective.

UN investigators highlighted gaps in the legal frameworks of both Iraq and Iraq's autonomous Kurdish region, which "largely fail to ensure the appropriate respect and protection of women and children who have been subjected to sexual and other forms of violence".

Iraq's laws governing sexual and domestic violence offer inadequate protections for women, and would be an obstacle to the prosecution of Islamic State-related crimes, the report said.

The report comes three days after Iraqi security forces launched their offensive to retake the city of Tal Afar, one of the militant group's last remaining strongholds in Iraq.

"With significant areas under the control of IS having been reclaimed, it is now urgent to consider what steps need to be taken to ensure the protection, recovery, reintegration and redress for the thousands of women and girls," the report states.

Though the report focuses on crimes committed by IS, it also references abuses committed by groups fighting against the militants. These include "revenge attacks" against women thought to have been affiliated with IS, sometimes sanctioned by tribal agreements.

Marriage licences and birth certificates issued in IS-held territories are generally not recognised by Iraqi and Kurdish officials. The report recommends that this be rectified, to avoid leaving women and babies without legal status, particularly those born of sexual slavery.

UNHCR has identified nearly 800 children whose births had been registered by Islamic State in areas under its control.

"The government must ensure (these children) are protected from marginalisation and abuse," al-Hussein insisted.

Women who were married to IS fighters, with or without their consent, risked "discrimination and forms of collective punishment" based on the suspicion they cooperated with the group. 

Investigators found that men and boys had also been subjected to sexual violence by the militants.

Tuesday's report builds on last year’s finding that IS was committing genocide against the Yazidi people. The rare designation under international law marked the first time genocide was recognised as being carried out by non-state actors. 

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