Belgium opens first trial linked to Yazidi genocide

Sammy Djedou, a former Daesh jihadi from Belgium, is being prosecuted for a genocide committed in Syria, even though he was reported by the US Department of Defense to have been killed in a 2016 airstrike in Raqqa, Syria. (X: @DHBruxelles)
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Updated 07 November 2025
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Belgium opens first trial linked to Yazidi genocide

  • Sammy Djedou was reported by the US Department of Defense to have been killed in a 2016 airstrike in Raqqa, Syria
  • Belgian authorities never received formal confirmation of his death, and opted to prosecute him in absentia

BRUSSELS: A Belgian jihadist accused of acts of genocide against the Yazidi religious minority in Iraq and Syria — and presumed killed in conflict — went on trial in absentia Thursday in Brussels.
Sammy Djedou, a former fighter with the Daesh group, or Islamic State, was reported by the Pentagon to have been killed in a 2016 airstrike in Raqqa, Syria.
Belgian authorities never received formal confirmation of his death, and opted to prosecute him in absentia, in the country’s first trial related to mass crimes against the Yazidis.
Previously convicted in absentia on Belgian terrorism charges, Djedou faces charges of “genocide” for his alleged role from 2014 onwards in a Daesh campaign to exterminate the minority group.
He also stands accused of “crimes against humanity” for the suspected rape and sexual enslavement of Yazidi women.
Three Yazidi victims have been identified, two of whom were minors at the time of the crimes allegedly committed between November 2014 and December 2016.
Two are plaintiffs in the case and all three are expected to testify about their ordeal before the Brussels criminal court, with the trial expected to last a week.
The Belgian counter-terrorism investigation relies heavily on evidence gathered by journalists and NGOs operating in war zones following the fall of Daesh's last stronghold in Baghouz, Syria, in 2019.

Mass persecution 

Born in Brussels in August 1989 to a Belgian mother and Ivorian father, Djedou converted to Islam at age 15 and left for Syria in October 2012 to join Daesh, according to the investigation.
He is later believed to have become a senior figure in the group’s external operations unit, tasked with planning attacks in Europe.
In 2021, he was sentenced in Belgium to 13 years in prison for leading a terrorist group.
He was also targeted in a 2022 trial into support networks behind the November 13, 2015 attacks in Paris that claimed 130 lives. He was convicted in that case but received no prison sentence.
The Yazidis, a Kurdish-speaking minority practicing a pre-Islamic faith, were primarily settled in northern Iraq before suffering mass persecution by IS beginning in August 2014.
Thousands fled as the jihadists launched brutal attacks in a campaign that UN investigators have qualified as genocide.
According to the United Nations, thousands of Yazidi women and girls were subjected to rape, abduction, and inhumane treatment including slavery.
Prosecutors in the Djedou case argue that IS “institutionalized the sexual enslavement of Yazidi women,” turning it into a form of trade that became a significant part of the group’s economy.
 


Cuba defends military drills as deterrent against US aggression

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Cuba defends military drills as deterrent against US aggression

HAVANA: Cuban President Miguel Diaz-Canel defended his country’s military preparedness exercises on Saturday as a deterrent against potential aggression from the United States.
US President Donald Trump this month warned that Cuba “is ready to fall” and told Havana to “make a deal” or pay a price similar to Venezuela, whose ousted leader Nicolas Maduro was taken to America by US forces in a January 3 bombing raid that killed dozens of people.
Venezuela was a key ally of Cuba and a critical supplier of oil and money, which Trump has vowed to cut off.
Diaz-Canel on Saturday supervised military exercises that included a tank unit from Cuba’s armed forces.
He was accompanied by Cuban General Alvaro Lopez Miera, who is the minister of the armed forces, and other high-ranking military officials.
“The best way to prevent aggression is for imperialism to have to calculate the price of attacking our country,” Diaz-Canel said in remarks broadcast on Cuban television.
“And that has a lot to do with our preparation for this type of military action... This takes on significant importance in the current circumstances,” he added.
Cuba’s National Defense Council, which is led by Diaz-Canel, recently met “with the objective of increasing and improving the level of preparedness and cohesion” among the country’s leadership, according to an official government statement.
The council met to “analyze and approve the plans and measures for transitioning to a State of War,” the statement added, without providing further details.
These military exercises are part of the country’s preparation “under the strategic concept of the War of the Entire People,” a term used by authorities for the mobilization of civilians in the event of armed conflict.