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Former Yazidi Captives of IS Reunite With Families in Iraq


Dilbar Ali Ravu, 10, is kissed by his aunt Dalal Ravu after Yazidi children were reunited with their families in Iraq after five years of captivity with the Islamic State group, March 2, 2019.
Dilbar Ali Ravu, 10, is kissed by his aunt Dalal Ravu after Yazidi children were reunited with their families in Iraq after five years of captivity with the Islamic State group, March 2, 2019.

A group of Yazidi women and children reunited with their families in Iraq Saturday after five years of captivity at the hands of the Islamic State group, hugging and kissing relatives in emotional scenes that underscored their years-long ordeal and that of their devastated community.

Elated families met their loved ones at a rural truck stop on the road between Sinjar and Dohuk, tossing candy in the air like confetti, the women ululating with joy.

The 18 returning children, aged 10 to 15, appeared weary and at times uneasy with the attention of the media and officials. One teenage boy collapsed in his aunt's arms and broke down in tears. Few parents were there to receive their children — many are still missing in territory held by the Islamic State, or have been confirmed killed. Other parents have already sought asylum in Western nations, in the hopes their children will be able to follow them.

Still, the children could not hide their joy at being hugged and kissed once more by their relatives after the long and traumatic separation.

They included 11 boys that many fear were trained in military camps by IS, though they all denied it. Only days since escaping the extremist group, the children were struggling to come to terms with their ordeal.

“They treated us well,” said 13-year-old Milad Hussein Khalaf. He said the militants separated him from his family when they were abducted in 2014 and sent the then-8-year-old to be raised by an IS family.

About 3,000 Yazidis are still missing after IS militants stormed their communities in the Sinjar region in northwest Iraq in 2014, and enslaved, raped and killed thousands of worshippers of the esoteric faith. The extremist group considers the Kurdish-speaking religious minority to be heretics.

The group of 3 Yazidi women and 18 children who reunited with their families Saturday are among thousands of civilians who emerged in the last few days from the last speck of territory held by the Islamic State group in the village of Baghouz, in eastern Syria. They crossed into Iraq from Syria on Friday, and were picked up by their families on Saturday.

Khalaf said his IS family put him in a religious school and he's learned to recite passages from the Quran which he studied every day. Khalaf's older cousin, Siri Ali, used a video chat app on her phone so her sisters in Canada could see him arrive. She said Khalaf doesn't know that his parents are still missing.

Dilbar Ali Ravu, 10, is reunited with his family in Iraq after five years of captivity with the Islamic State group, March 2, 2019.
Dilbar Ali Ravu, 10, is reunited with his family in Iraq after five years of captivity with the Islamic State group, March 2, 2019.

“Thank God, they have returned and they are among us. This child does not have a mother or a father. We are going to be his parents,” said Khalaf's other cousin, Noura Ali.

“We thank all the sides that worked together to rescue them, and we hope that the rest of the missing people will return.”

Khalaf said there are still children in Baghuz, but he couldn't know how many.

Also among the arrivals was Dilbar Ali Ravu, 10. He looked slightly stunned, but also couldn't hide his joy. His uncle, Jihad Ravu, said Dilbar developed lesions on his face while he was being held in a cell in Tal Afar in the early days of his captivity, after he was abducted five years ago. He says Dilbar hasn't had proper medical treatment since then.

Susan Fahmy, a coordinator for the NGO Khalsa Aid, said she is certain all the boys were sent to training and that they need years of rehabilitation.

She said some Yazidi boys have been caught communicating with IS a year after they returned. She also said women are being pressured to give up their children fathered by IS men, and was alarmed that one of the women arrived without her kids.

Hosni Murad, the brother of Yazidi activist Nadia Murad, who received the Nobel Peace Prize for her advocacy on behalf of victims of wartime sexual violence, was there to welcome home his 10-year-old nephew, Khashman Samir.

Samir's four siblings and his parents were all killed by IS, said Murad. “They were all victims of Daesh,” he said, using the Arabic acronym for the group. “He's the first and the last one to return from the family.”

Murad said he is certain his nephew, and all the boys, were given military training by IS, and he believes many young men are returning to the community harboring sympathies for the extremists. “Yes, in truth, we're afraid they'll do something. Their mindset is Daesh. I mean it's been five years they've been training with them.”

Murad said another nephew of his, aged 16, spurned his pleas to come home, choosing to stay with IS until the end.

“He replied: `You are all infidels,’” Murad said, recalling the boy's response. He hasn't heard from him in months.

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