Nightmare in  Iraq 
Posted:  10 Aug 2014 09:25 PM PDT 
 
Joe Stork via Human Rights Watch 
Fearing for their lives, more than 150,000 Yezidis fled Sinjar and  
surrounding villages to mountains north of the city on August 3, 2014 when the  
Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS) attacked the area. Some young and 
elderly  are dying from the harsh conditions.  
I visited a Yezidi village south of Dohuk last Wednesday — a magnet for  
60,000 to 70,000 Yezidis fleeing fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and  
Sham (ISIS). Those not taken into homes of local residents were camped in  
classrooms, schoolyards, or buildings under construction. They had bread and  
water, but not much else, having fled their homes a few days earlier with 
no  more than the clothes on their backs.  
The next day, a colleague found only two families at the village – the 
rest,  thousands of them, had fled overnight after ISIS seized control of 
nearby 
towns  populated by Iraqi Christians. The Yezidis, an Iraqi minority who 
are ethnically  related to Kurds and practice a 4,000-year-old religion, 
feared they could not  count on protection from Kurdish peshmerga forces who 
control Iraqi  Kurdistan. 
Many more Yezidis – upwards of 150,000– fled Sunday morning from Sinjar 
and  surrounding villages into rugged mountains a dozen or so kilometers to 
the  north. There, they found few means of sustenance or even shelter amid the 
 mountains’ sparse vegetation – no water to speak of, and little by way of 
 shelter from summer temperatures that can soar to 120 Fahrenheit. Perhaps 
as  many as 40,000 managed to descend on the northern side and make their 
escape  that same day, before ISIS surrounded the mountains. 
Over the following days, a few thousand more trickled out in small groups,  
braving ISIS snipers, and made their way into Syria before crossing back 
into  Iraq, with the help of Syrian Kurdish fighters, some distance to the 
north of  Dohuk. 
I met with more than a dozen of those who escaped the mountains and also  
managed to speak by cellphone with other Yezidis still stranded there. One  
Yezidi activist in the village I visited showed me a text message he had just 
 received on his phone: “Evening is coming, send helicopters with food and 
water  by tomorrow. Otherwise you will be hearing about a mass grave.” 
That was three days ago. The Pentagon announced Friday that US planes had  
dropped supplies of food and water. I spoke today with a doctor among those  
still in the mountains. He said there were about 5,000 other Yezidis in his 
 immediate area, and that he had seen no sign of the air-dropped supplies. 
He  said 10 to 15 people were dying each day, a third to a half of them 
young  children, mainly from dehydration. Four more people had already died 
that 
day.  “No water, no food, no rescue, no way out,” he said. The doctor said 
he had  heard of two cases of women who died in childbirth. 
Every one of the many displaced Yezidis I spoke with told the same story of 
 how this started. On Sunday, August 3 at about 4 a.m. they heard gunfire. 
Three  or four hours later the Kurdish peshmerga forces that had been their 
protection  withdrew without explanation. One of the Yezidi peshmerga asked 
the local  commander why. “We have no orders to fight” was the response. 
The next day, the  Kurdish Regional Government president, Masoud Barzani, 
said, “We decided to go  beyond the defensive position and fight the terrorists 
to the last breath.” But  according to the Yezidi accounts, there was no “
defensive position” to begin  with, and there has been little evidence so far 
of any Kurdish offensive. 
The ISIS strategy since capturing Iraq’s second largest city, Mosul, a 
month  ago, is becoming increasingly apparent: to clear the area between Mosul 
and the  Tigris river to the west of non-Muslim minorities – make that 
non-Sunni Muslims,  since Shia are also squarely in ISIS’s gun sights. An ISIS 
photospread  distributed shortly after the capture of Sinjar showed them 
executing people who  were clearly civilians. 
The slides did not show the other horrors ISIS has been inflicting on those 
 who fall into their clutches. At least a dozen Yezidi men I spoke with 
told how  ISIS had abducted scores of women and girls, detaining large numbers 
in a school  in Tel Afar, a town just northwest of Mosul that ISIS captured 
in late June.  Others had been trucked across the Syrian border to a 
detention center in the  ISIS-controlled town of Huli. 
Asad, a young man I spoke with today, described how ISIS abducted some 50  
members of his extended family as they tried to escape from the village of 
Khana  Sor and forced them to drive across the Syrian border. His brother 
Raad, as he  drove one of the cars, had kept his cellphone open on his lap, on 
speaker, while  Asad in Erbil kept adding funds from scratch cards to keep 
the line open. “I was  blind, Raad was my guide,” he said. Raad described to 
him over the course of  four hours the route that ISIS forced the captured 
family to drive, until they  crossed into Syria. 
“I lost contact then,” he said. The next day he tried the numbers of 
another  brother. Someone else answered. “Do not call,” that person said. “We 
have all  their mobiles, we don’t know where they are,” and hung up. 

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