Iraq Opens First ISIS Mass Grave in Yazidi Region

Iraqi authorities on Friday opened a first mass
grave containing victims of the ISIS group in the Yazidi stronghold of Sinjar,
where militants brutally targeted the minority.
Nobel Peace Prize winner Nadia Murad, a Yazidi who
escaped ISIS and became an outspoken advocate for her community, attended the
ceremony in her home village of Kojo to mark the start of exhumations.
The United Nations, which is assisting with the
forensic work, says the first opening of a mass grave in the region will help
to shed light on the fate those inhabitants killed by ISIS.
Hundreds of men and women from the village are
believed to have been executed by the militants when they took over the area in
2014.
The Yazidi people were targeted by the ISIS
militants who swept across northern Iraq in 2014 and seized their bastion of
Sinjar near the border with Syria.
ISIS militants slaughtered thousands of Yazidi men
and boys, then abducted women and girls to be abused as sex slaves.
The Kurdish-speaking Yazidis follow an ancient
religion rooted in Zoroastrianism, but ISIS considers them to be
"apostates".
The United Nations has said ISIS' actions could
amount to genocide, and is investigating the group's atrocities across Iraq.
Murad called at Friday's event for Iraq's central
authorities and those in the Kurdistan region to "protect the mass
graves" so that proof could be found of the "genocide of the
Yazidis".
"There will not be reconciliation with the Arab
tribes of our region if their dignitaries don't give the names of those who carried
out the crimes so they can be judged," she said.
The head of the UN investigative team Karim Khan
said the exhumation marked an "important moment" for the probe, with
73 mass graves discovered so far in Sinjar alone.
"The road towards accountability is a long one,
and many challenges lay ahead," he said in a statement.
"Notwithstanding this, the spirit of
cooperation between the survivor community and the government of Iraq is to be
applauded."
ISIS is currently battling to defend the last shred
of its crumbling "caliphate" across the border Syria in the face of
Kurdish-led forces backed by an international coalition.