Baghdad: Rebels executed dozens of people from Iraqs Yazidi minority who refused to leave their traditional habitats, reports said said.
Witnesses told a news agency that 67 young men were shot dead by the militants in the northern town of Sinjar, which the militants stormed on Sunday, driving off hundreds of families who had been residing in the area.
The men had been detained by the Isil militants since Sunday, witnesses added.
The Kurdish Bas News Agency reported that 88 Yazidis had been executed.
Yazidis, a small community that follows a 4,000-year-old faith has been repeatedly targeted by militants who call them devil-worshippers because of their unique beliefs and practices.
Sinjar was the main hub of the Yazidis in Iraq but the town of 300,000 fell to the Isil, which took the main northern city of Mosul on June 10 and this weekend secured much of its hinterland.
What Daash [the Arabic acronym by which Isil is known] has done against the Yazidis in Sinjar is ethnic cleansing, said Khodhr Domli, a Yazidi rights activist based in the Kurdish city of Dohuk.
There are still thousands of people heading to Dohuk but thousands are also trapped in the Sinjar mountains, he told AFP.
There are old people among them, children. They have no food nor water, some have died already.
We last had contact with them was last night [Sunday] but this morning we have not been able to make contact, Domli said. They face a double threat: nature and Daash.
As Kurdish fighters struggled to hold back the onslaught of the militants on Iraqs north, some 40,000 Yazidis fled the northern towns of Sinjar and Zumar, said Jawhar Ali Begg, a spokesperson for the community.
Sinjar was also home to hundreds of families from the Turkmen Shia minority who had fled to the nearby city of Tal Afar in the early days of the militant offensive nearly two months ago.
Ali Al Bayati, a Turkmen rights activist, said he was receiving very alarming reports about the people who had been forced back on the road on Sunday.
Out of the 500 Turkmen Shia families who had to flee, about 100 or more were able to reach a cement factory located about 15 kilometres outside Sinjar, he said.
They are still there and have nothing. They need help, he said.
Bayati said that a larger group fleeing the raids was intercepted by Isil militants, who executed many of the men.
The terrorists took the women as slaves and are now holding a large group at Tal Afar airport.
The UN on Sunday expressed grave concerns for the physical safety of these civilians who fled Sinjar.
There was no information immediately available on the fate of the displaced from Iraqs federal government or the autonomous Kurdish government.
What sets the Yazidis apart
The largest community is in Iraq 600,000 people according to the highest Yazidi estimates, but barely 100,000 according to others while a few thousand are also found in Syria, Turkey, Armenia and Georgia. They are mostly impoverished farmers and herders.
They follow a faith born in Mesopotamia more than 4,000 years ago. It is rooted in Zoroastrianism but has over time blended in elements of Islam and Christianity. During the fourteenth century, important Yezidi tribes whose sphere of influence stretched well into what is now Turkey (including, for a period, the rulers of the principality of Jazira) are cited in historical sources as Yazidi.
According to Mo?ammed A-ahrastani, “The Yezidis are the followers of Yezîd bn Unaisa, the founder of the sect, which took its name from him.
Yazidis discourage marriage outside the community and even across their caste system. Their unique beliefs and practices some are known to refrain from eating lettuce and wearing the colour blue have often been misconstrued as satanic. Muslims consider the peacock a demon figure and refer to Yazidis as devil-worshippers.
As non-Arab and non-Muslim Iraqis, they have long been one of the countrys most vulnerable minorities. Persecution under Saddam Hussain forced thousands of families to flee the country. Germany is home to the largest community abroad, with an estimated 40,000.
Massive truck bombs almost entirely destroyed two small Yazidi villages in northern Iraq on August 14, 2007. More than 400 people died in the explosions, the single deadliest attack since the 2003 US-led invasion.
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