ISIS Horrors Resurface With Yazidi Remains to be Identified

Published June 10th, 2019 - 09:10 GMT
A Yazidi woman searches for clues that might lead her to missing relatives in the wake of the Islamic State group’s recent attacks on members of the minority. (AFP/ File Photo)
A Yazidi woman searches for clues that might lead her to missing relatives in the wake of the Islamic State group’s recent attacks on members of the minority. (AFP/ File Photo)
Highlights
Iraq set to start DNA testing to identify the remains of 141 bodies found in mass graves.

The head of Iraq's forensics administration said his office will begin DNA testing to identify the remains of 141 bodies found in mass graves, believed to contain the Yazidi victims of the Islamic State group's killing campaign five years ago.

Zaid al-Yousef said the bodies were found in 12 graves located by Yazidi survivors in the Sinjar region in north Iraq.

The Yazidis are a religious minority with unique beliefs that distinguish them from Muslim and Christian worshippers in the region.

IS militants, who seized control of north Iraq in 2014, said the Yazidis were "apostates" and killed hundreds of men while enslaving thousands of women and children.

The UN called it a genocide.

Al-Yousef told AP on Sunday it will take until August to identify the remains.

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This article has been adapted from its original source.

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