Saturday 9 August 2014

ISIS Women Allegedly kidnapped 400 residents Yazidi minority in Iraq

Sinjar forward motion Daulah Islamiyah group (Islamic State / IS) caused many casualties and damage in the path of their deployment, both in Syria and Iraq.

Not only houses of worship and historic sites, have fallen thousands of lives. According to a report in June this year, there have been at least 170,000 lives since the Syrian crisis began, although the new IS was involved some time after the start of the conflict.

For those who are not killed, the suffering are indeed diverse. Besides evicted from their dwellings, the women experienced a variety of additional humiliation degrading their honor as a woman. So that was launched from Syria (08/08/2014).

Group Daulah Islamiyah (Islamic State / IS) is suspected to have abducted more than 400 Yazidis of Sinjar women in northern Iraq on Tuesday night, reported by news agency Shafaaq News on Wednesday. The news agency is known to support Kurdistan.

"IS allot women abductees that the fighters in the forests of Mosul and Tal Afar," as reported by a correspondent for a news channel Kuwait, Aladalah TV, on Wednesday.

Yazid is a religious minority in northern Syria and Iraq and the Kurdish language. Sinjar town located north of the border between Syria and Iraq.

The kidnapping occurred in the midst of a takeover by the IS Sinjar which began last Sunday. Sinjar is home to many of the Yazidis in Iraq. Thousands of people have been displaced from the region.

This area has been protected by Iraqi Kurdish military forces known as pershmerga, but was defeated in brief attacks against IS.

Fall of Sinjar is the first time a major setback for the military power of the Kurds in Iraq since the IS taking over Mosul in June.

Meanwhile, thousands of other Yazidis, who dread seeing the abomination extremist group, was not able to run away and get stuck in the top of Mount Sinjar and dying of thirst.

IS on the region's annexation allow greater access between their forces in the city of Hasakah in northeastern states of Syria and the city of Mosul in northern Iraq.