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Published August 2, 2019 | Version 1.0.0
Report Open

Destroying the Soul of the Yazidis: Cultural Heritage Destruction during the Islamic State's Genocide against the Yazidis

  • 1. Chief Legal Officer, RASHID International
  • 2. Documentation Project Manager, Yazda
  • 3. Research Associate, EAMENA Project Durham University
  • 4. Deputy Director, Yazda
  • 5. EAMENA Project Co-Investigator, Durham University
  • 6. Post-Doctoral Research Fellow, University of Birmingham (UK)
  • 7. Associate Professor, Durham University
  • 8. Associate Honorary Research Fellow, University of Exeter
  • 9. Research Analyst, Yazda
  • 10. College of Humanities, University of Duhok, Kurdistan Region of Iraq
  • 11. Yazidi Academic, Bahzani, Iraq
  • 12. Yazidi Headmaster, Shigal, Iraq
  • 13. Documentation Project, Yazda
  • 1. Media Officer, Yazda
  • 2. Beyond Borders Photography
  • 3. Freelance Photographer
  • 4. Yazda
  • 5. Operations Manager, Yazda
  • 6. Documentation Team, Yazda
  • 7. Media Manager, Yazda
  • 8. Board Member, Yazda

Description

 

Abstract

On 2 August 2019, the eve of the 5th anniversary of the attacks on Sinjar by the Islamic State (IS), RASHID International, Yazda and the Endangered Archaeology in the Middle East and North Africa Project (EAMENA) released the results of their investigation into cultural heritage destruction during the genocide against the Yazidis, in a report entitled ‘Destroying the Soul of the Yazidis: Cultural Heritage Destruction during the Islamic State’s Genocide against the Yazidis’.

Out of the total of 68 sites reported destroyed we consider 16 sites in the Bahzani/Bashiqa area and 8 in the Sinjar area to which access was possible and which could be documented.

Discussions of the genocide committed against the Yazidi people by IS from 2014 onwards have generally focused on murder, slavery and sexual exploitation. In this report we analyze the destruction of Yazidi tangible and intangible cultural heritage as a significant facet of the Islamic State’s policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide. Evidence of destruction is collected and presented in context with other criminal acts.

 

Peer Review

A peer-reviewed academic article based on the report was published in the Asian Yearbook of Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (AYHR), Volume 5, pp 111-144, DOI: 10.1163/9789004466180_006. The author manuscript of the article is available open access. The AYHR is edited by Professor Javaid Rehman, the UN Special Rapporteur on the human rights situation in the Islamic Republic of Iran.

 

Content

Section 1 introduces the Yazidi (Êzidî being the preferred term) people and their strong connection to their cultural heritage.

Section 2 provides an overview of the genocide against the Yazidis. The Islamic State made no secret of its intention to eradicate the Yazidi community and commenced a coldly calculated policy of ethnic cleansing and genocide on 3 August 2014.

Section 3 analyzes the relevant framework of international criminal law. The destruction of tangible cultural heritage is most easily prosecuted as a war crime. Several convictions were obtained before the ICTY, as well as one conviction (Al-Mahdi) and one indictment (Ag Mahmoud) before the International Criminal Court. Attacks against tangible heritage may also be prosecuted as the crime of persecution, a crime against humanity. Numerous indictments and convictions before the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia (ICTY) and other courts attest to the viability of this approach. Finally, destruction of tangible heritage also serves as evidence of the special intent to destroy (dolus specialis) a protected group as part of the crime of genocide.

Section 4 provides original research, evidence and context on the destruction of Yazidi tangible cultural heritage in the Bahzani/Bashiqa and Sinjar areas of northern Iraq. We present satellite imagery analysis conducted by the EAMENA Project, drawing on data provided by Yazidi representatives. According to the Department of Yazidi Affairs in the Ministry of Awqaf and Religious Affairs in the Kurdistan Regional Government 68 Yazidi sites were destroyed by the Islamic State. We consider 16 sites in the Bahzani/Bashiqa area and 8 in the Sinjar area to which access was possible and which could be documented. We include description and religious importance of each site, satellite analysis and photographic evidence.

Section 5 offers conclusions and recommendations. We conclude that the destruction of the cultural heritage of the Yazidi people constitutes a war crime, a crime against humanity (persecution) and further evidence of genocide.

 

Contact

Seán Fobbe

Chief Legal Officer (RASHID International)

legal@rashid-international.org

 

Files

2019_RASHID_Destroying_the_Soul_of_the_Yazidis_Report.pdf

Files (43.2 MB)

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