Stanford CIS

The US Holocaust Memorial Museum: “ISIL Is Committing Genocide Against the Yezidis in Iraq”

By Beth Van Schaack on

The US Holocaust Memorial Museum (USHMM) has issued an important and distressing report characterizing violence against the Yezidi people in 2014 in Iraq as amounting to genocide. This is not the first time ISIL’s campaign against this minority group has been deemed a genocide, as I have recounted before. (See in particular a report by the United Nations Assistance Mission for Iraq and the Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights, which also calls for the Security Council to refer the situation in Iraq to the International Criminal Court). Nonetheless, coming from the USHMM, this conclusion carries particular force.

Even more worrisome, the Museum’s report — based on in-depth interviews in Iraq that include firsthand reports of the Mount Sinjar crisis — makes clear that this genocide is ongoing against the victims whom ISIL has kidnapped and could resume in the future in other areas where the surviving Yezidi find themselves. The report also describes the commission of crimes against humanity and ethnic cleansing committed against other non-Muslim minority groups in northern Iraq. So far, the Museum has not found firm evidence of genocidal intent on the part of ISIL with respect to these groups, but its results do not preclude this finding in the future and research is ongoing. In particular, the report notes that the risk of genocide against the Shia Turkmen and Shia Shabak groups remains acute. All told, the Museum concludes that ISIL

will continue to pose an existential threat to minorities who seek to return to their homes.

This conclusion stems from a visit to northern Iraq by Museum staff who interviewed victims of ISIL persecution hailing from multiple minority communities, including survivors representing Iraq’s Christian, Yezidi, Turkmen, Shabak, Sabaean-Mandaean, and Kaka’i populations. The report observes that the present-day violence marks the culmination of a long history of ethnic persecution against minority groups dating from the Arabization campaigns of the 1930s, the forced displacement of more than a million Kurds and other non-Arabs in the late 1970s, the widespread and systematic abuse — including the use of chemical weapons — of ethnic and religious communities by Saddam Hussein’s Ba’athist regime, and the sectarian violence unleashed by the toppling of Hussein and the rise of Islamic extremism.

The Museum’s genocide determination is based on a “preponderance of the evidence” standard, so it does not reflect the standard necessary for ascribing individual criminal responsibility. That said, the evidence is compelling.

The Yezidi — a religious sect that fits the definition of protected group under theConvention on the Prevention and Punishment of the Crime of Genocide — have been subjected to all five forms of harm enumerated in the Genocide Convention: killing members of the group, causing serious bodily and mental harm, subjecting members of the group to conditions of life calculated to destroy them in whole or in part, imposing measures to prevent births, and the forcible transfer of children. The latter two acts are primarily accomplished through the kidnapping, sexual slavery, and forced conversion of Yezidi women and children. In particular, children who have been forced to convert to Sunni Islam are deprived of the

opportunity to grow up within, and exposed to, their distinct culture and religion.

Identifying the specific intent to commit genocide is often the hardest element of the definition to satisfy, particularly when it is necessary to demonstrate the existence of a genocidal policy on the part of a government or group. Through a rigorous review of ISIL’s own publications and decrees, however, the Museum uncovered clear evidence of genocidal intent. Indeed, it is apparent that ISIL undertook a deliberative internal process to determine how to address the presence of Yezidis within territory under ISIL control. Following this inquiry, ISIL concluded that the Yezidis’ polytheistic religion cannot coexist alongside ISIL’s perverted form of Islam and so the group must be eliminated through forcible conversion or death. In this regard, ISIL differentiated the Yezidis — deemed devil worshippers — from Christians and Jews — ahl al kitab, “people of the book.” The latter were offered the opportunity to convert to Islam, expelled outright, or given the option of paying a jizya (tax) to avoid conversion or death. Thus:

Under [ISIL]’s ideology, adherents of religions considered infidel or apostate—including Yezidis—are to be converted or killed and members of other religions—such as Christians—are to be subjected to expulsion, extortion, or forced conversion.

Implementing this two-tiered persecutory system led to mass atrocities against all these groups, and genocide against the Yezidis. And so,

the commission of mass atrocities was part of [ISIL’s] strategy, and … this intent was matched with the ability to carry out the crimes.

The report concludes with the chilling prediction that the

violence, displacement and cultural erasure is so severe that the very existence of certain minority groups in Iraq is at risk.

This most recent report emerged from a “Bearing Witness” trip to the field by members of the Museum’s Simon-Skjodt Center for the Prevention of Genocide, which is dedicated to making the prevention of genocide and other atrocity crimes a core foreign policy priority through its research, education, and public outreach.

Bearing Witness reports seek to “elevate the voices and experiences of those facing persecution and most affected by violence.” In addition, it is hoped that the results will enable policymakers to “better understand the dynamics that should have informed early warning and early action.”

Read the full post at Just Security.