Canada must do more to help persecuted Yazidis, MPs told - Action News
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Canada must do more to help persecuted Yazidis, MPs told

Canada must do more to help desperate Yazidi survivors of genocide and cannot rely on a "flawed" refugee identification system led by the United Nations, advocates tell MPs in Ottawa on the second day of three days of hearings on immigration policy.

WARNING: Story contains some graphic details

A girl from the minority Yazidi sect, fleeing the violence in the Iraqi town of Sinjar, rests at the Iraqi-Syrian border crossing in Fishkhabour, Dohuk province. (Youssef Boudlal/Reuters)

Canada must do more to help desperateYazidisurvivors of genocide and cannot rely on a "flawed" refugee identification system led by theUnited Nations, advocates told MPs today in Ottawa.

The House of Commons immigration committeeheard horrific accounts of torture, rape, murder and enslavement as witnessesoffered emotional testimony about atrocities carried out by the Islamic State of Iraq and Syria (ISIS).

After a warning thattestimonymay be "upsetting" to members of the committee and viewing public,MPs heard shocking stories of mass killings, children raped by multiple men several times a day, and mothers being forced to feed on the flesh of their own children.

MPs are holding three days of committeehearings called "Immigration Measures for the Protection of Vulnerable Groups."

Rape, torture, murder

NadiaMuradBaseeTaha,who was abducted and held by ISIS for three months,said the world has remained "negligent" and "silent" as ISIS continues to rape, torture, kill and enslaveYazidisin a quest to exterminate the targeted population.

Yazidi activist makes plea to Parliamentary committee

8 years ago
Duration 2:27
Nadia Murad Basee Taha, a Yazidi, and Human Rights Activist, makes an impassioned presentation to the Federal Immigration Committee asking for canada to start bringing in more Yazidi refugees.

Shebroke down in tears recounting theSinjarmassacre, witht 4,000 people killed, 6,000 takenhostageandanother 4,000 forced to flee to the mountains.

"We knew our destiny was for the men to be killed and the women and children to be held hostages," she said.

Tara urged Canada and the international community to do more to help theYazidipeople, including bringing in more refugees and providing more humanitarian and medical assistance for those in camps.

"We only want to live peacefully that's all we want," she told MPs.

3 Yazidi refugees

An audit of Syrian refugee cases requested by then Prime Minister Stephen Harper late last spring reveals of 546 people reviewed, only three identified as Yazidi, a Kurdish minority group thatpractisesan ancient faith.

But Conservative immigration critic MichelleRempel insisted the Conservative government had specifically asked that ethnic and religious minorities be given priority in identification lists, and urged the UN to do more to flag and fasttrack Yazidizs in theprocess.

In a news conference on Parliament Hillbefore the hearing, sheurged the government to "lean on" the United Nations toprioritizeYazidisand other persecuted religious minorities in resettling refugees.

Rempelbecame emotional recalling the "horrors" of stories she has heard from persecuted members of the ancient religious faith targeted by ISIS, andurged the Liberals not to let"political correctness" guide Canada's refugee policy.

"These people are being wiped off the face of the Earth," she said.

During the committee hearings, witnesses agreed the UN process was not working to protect the Yazidi people.

'Flawed' process

"It's flawed, it's unfair and it's unacceptable," said Murad Ismael, executive director of the advocacy group Yazda, noting that some waiting for asylum have been told they mustwait until 2022.

He called for Canada to impose a quota of 5,000 to 10,000 Yazidi refugees, targeting the most vulnerable survivors of the genocide.

In June, a United Nations report said militants from the Islamic State in Iraq and Syria (ISIS), an al-Qaeda splinter group fighting in the Middle East to establish an Islamist state,were seeking to destroy the ancient religious community of 400,000 people through killings, sexual slavery and other crimes.

The report said the militants had been systematically rounding up Yazidis since August 2014, seeking to "erase their identity," a finding that meets the definition of genocide under the 1948 UN Convention on Genocide.

Canadian Foreign Affairs Minister StphaneDion subsequently declared that genocide was underway.

Ismaelurged Parliament to reintroduce a failed resolution to declare the atrocities as genocide.