Iraqi move to promote rights of Yazidis to compensate for ISIS violations
Within the framework of Iraq’s tendencies to enhance the
rights of the Iraqi components and sects, parliamentary leaders called for
activating the laws related to these components to consolidate their rights
that were violated during the last period and to compensate them for the
suffering they were subjected to at the hands of ISIS.
First Deputy Parliament Speaker Mohsen Al-Mandalawi stressed
the need to activate the Yazidi Women Survivors Law, saying on Twitter, “We
call for establishing all their rights and demands and compensating them for
the killing, displacement and captivity that befell them at the hands of ISIS,”
adding, “in addition to activating the Yazidi Survivors Law and returning them
to their areas of residence quickly.”
Significance of the timing
Iraqi political analyst Dr. Ghazi Faisal appreciated
Mandalawi’s call to activate the Yazidi Survivors Law, pointing out that this
announcement at this time is significant because it coincides with the Yazidis’
celebration of their feast, the return of young men and women to their cities,
and the revival of religious rites and rituals as part of the Iraqi cultural
heritage and the ancient roots of the ancient Iraqi civilization.
Faisal explained in exclusive statements to the Reference
that this step is also a message of emphasizing the right of the Yazidis to a
free and dignified life and to enjoy the human rights guaranteed in the
constitution and religious and sectarian freedoms, as well as to compensate a
large number of them who have been subjected to grave violations represented in
rape, murder, displacement, captivity and various forms of psychological
torture and serious violations of human rights.
He pointed out that the activation of the Survivors Law for
Yazidis, Christians and others came due to the crimes committed against them
after ISIS seized Mosul and other areas in 2014 and the serious violations
committed by ISIS elements, especially rape, kidnapping, the selling of Yazidi
women in markets, and other systems of slavery that the Yazidis lived through,
in addition to the genocide and murder committed against the Yazidis, the
forced displacement of Christians, and other serious crimes against humanity
and serious violations of human rights.
Faisal said that this law was legislated to provide
important compensation to the Yazidis, in addition to a monthly salary that
guarantees their human and material rights and health care, as the
implementation of this law supports the International Organization for
Migration and a number of humanitarian organizations in European countries and
United Nations organizations to provide humanitarian care for the Yazidis who
have been subjected to violations.
He said that the commitment of the Iraqi law enforcement
authorities to activate this law includes everyone who has been subjected to
such violations, either by registering through the private electronic platform
or by coming to the relevant departments to confirm their testimony and
document all the injustices and violations they were subjected to by law enforcement.
Faisal pointed out that the activation of the law guarantees
the rights of the Yazidis who have been violated and is part of the Iraqi human
rights to a decent life, to own property, the right to work, or the right to
compensation in the event of material, moral or other violations.
Component rights
This step comes as part of the Iraqi government's steps to
guarantee the rights of the Iraqi components, as the Council of Ministers
approved in January that about a quarter of a million Yazidis would enjoy
owning lands and homes, following 47 years of their persistent demand for that.
Iraqi Prime Minister Mohammed Shia’ al-Sudani issued a joint
statement with officials from the United Nations, in which it was stated that
the decision, which came after 47 years of “depriving” the Iraqi Yazidis of
their homes in Sinjar, will be followed by other decisions within the prime
minister’s work schedule to ensure the principle of full citizenship, justice
and equality.
The Federal Supreme Court also issued a ruling on the equal
right of all Iraqis to own property without discrimination in Federal Case No.
8 of 2023, in which the plaintiffs challenged the constitutionality of
Legislative Order No. 12 of 2004 as far as the matter relates to the annulment
of Resolution 117 of 2000.