By Sirwan Kajjo
After more than three years, Rita Habib, a 30-year-old
Christian woman from the Iraqi city of Mosul, was recently reunited with her
blind father in Erbil, the capital of Iraq's Kurdistan Region. She and her
father are the sole survivors of a family whose members, like thousands of
Christians and other non-Muslims, was murdered by ISIS in mid-2014. Habib was
among hundreds of Christian and Yazidi women and girls abducted at the time and
sold into the sex trade. She was one of the lucky ones to be rescued by the
Christian advocacy group, the Shlomo Organization for Documentation, which paid
ISIS $30,000 for her release.
Abu Shujaa, a Yazidi activist who has been involved in
rescuing hundreds of Yazidi women from ISIS, helps secure their release in
various ways, but said that all require money, which is hard to come by.
When Raqqa, the former de facto capital of ISIS, was
liberated by U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces, many
captured women were freed. Despite losing control of Raqqa and other major
strongholds in Syria and Iraq, however, ISIS continues to enslave many of the
women and girls it kidnapped during its rise in 2014. The world seems to have
forgotten about them.
When ISIS carried out its onslaught on Yazidi towns across
northern Iraq in the summer of 2014, its mission was to eliminate the kufar
("infidel unbelievers"). To this end, it forced Yazidi men and women
to convert to Islam. Males who refused were murdered, and females taken as sex
slaves. Christians, viewed by ISIS as "People of the Book,"
purportedly fared better. They were ostensibly given the option of paying
jizya, a form of Islamic protection tax, as an alternative to death, for the
"privilege" of living under the rule of ISIS's so-called caliphate.
Such claims, however, were apparently just propaganda: all Christians were
forced to convert to Islam; Christian girls and women, as with Yazidis, were
forced into sex slavery.
Habib, traded four times during her captivity, witnessed
many cases of Christian and Yazidi girls -- some as young as 9 years old --
sold, raped and tortured by ISIS members.
At one point during the peak of the conflict, there were
nearly 7,000 non-Muslim females captured by ISIS. Currently, there are an
estimated 1,500 Christian and Yazidi girls and women still in captivity in Iraq
and Syria, while 1,000 others are missing. After their defeat in Raqqa, ISIS jihadists
reportedly moved most of the captive females to other areas under their control
in eastern Homs and southern Damascus. Others are believed to have been sold to
sex traffickers in Turkey.
With the anti-ISIS campaign gradually dwindling, many Christian
and Yazidi groups fear that discovering the fate of those girls and women still
in ISIS captivity is becoming even more difficult. It is an issue that the
international community cannot ignore.
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Sirwan Kajjo is a Syrian-Kurdish Washington-based journalist
and author.
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