France to take in 100 Yazidi women stranded in Iraqi Kurdistan

Yazidi human rights activist Nadia Murad was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize for her campaign to end sexual violence as a weapon of war. (AFP)
Updated 26 October 2018
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France to take in 100 Yazidi women stranded in Iraqi Kurdistan

  • Emmanuel Macron’s offer came following a meeting in Paris with Nadia Murad
  • Murad was one of thousands of Yazidi women captured by extremists before they were driven out of Sinjar

PARIS: French President Emmanuel Macron has pledged to bring to France 100 Yazidi women who were victims of assault by Daesh fighters in northern Iraq beginning in 2014, his office said Thursday.
Macron’s offer came after a meeting in Paris with Nadia Murad, who was awarded the Nobel Peace Prize this month for her campaign to end sexual violence as a weapon of war.
Murad was one of thousands of Yazidi women captured by extremists before they were driven out of Sinjar and other parts of Iraq, starting with campaigns by Kurdish forces backed by US-led coalition forces.
Macron said that in response to Murad’s request, 20 of the refugees being held without access to care in Iraqi Kurdistan would come to France by the end of this year, and the remainder in 2019.
He said he would also back Murad’s launch of a reconstruction fund for Sinjar to build hospitals and schools, hopefully encouraging Yazidis who had fled to return to their bastion.
Murad was in Paris to present a report from the International Federation for Human Rights (FIDH) on the brutalities inflicted on Yazidi women during the Daesh siege, in particular those by foreign fighters who had joined the extremists.
More than 6,800 Yazidis were kidnapped, of which 4,300 either escaped or were bought as slaves, while 2,500 remain missing, the report said.
The federation called on governments to pursue its citizens who fought alongside Daesh for participating in genocide and crimes against humanity.


UN chief decries global rise of ‘rule of force’

Updated 3 sec ago
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UN chief decries global rise of ‘rule of force’

GENEVA: Human rights are under “full-scale attack around the world,” UN chief Antonio Guterres warned Monday, saying the rule of law was being “outmuscled by the rule of force.”
“This assault is not coming from the shadows, or by surprise. It is happening in plain sight — and often led by those who hold the greatest power,” he told the opening of the UN Human Rights Council in Geneva.