Sex slavery pushes Islamic State victims to suicide: Amnesty

Women and girls from Iraq’s Yazidi religious minority forced into sexual slavery by the Islamic State jihadist group have committed suicide or tried to, Amnesty International said on Tuesday. IS militants have overrun swathes of Iraq since June, declared a cross-border caliphate also encompassing parts of neighboring Syria, and carried out a litany of abuses in both countries. The group has targeted Yazidis and other minorities in north Iraq in a campaign that rights group Amnesty said amounted to ethnic cleansing, murdering civilians and enslaving others for a fate that some captives consider even worse than death.

One day we were given clothes that looked like dance costumes and were told to bathe and wear those clothes. Jilan killed herself in the bathroom. She cut her wrists and hanged herself. She was very beautiful; I think she knew she was going to be taken away by a man and that is why she killed herself.

A Yazidi girl

Amnesty said that many of the perpetrators are IS fighters, but may also include supporters of the group. One former captive told the rights group that she and her sister tried to kill themselves to escape forced marriage, but were stopped from doing so. “We tied … scarves around our necks and pulled away from each other as hard as we could, until I fainted. … I could not speak for several days after that,” the 27-year-old told the rights group.

The physical and psychological toll of the horrifying sexual violence these women have endured is catastrophic. Many of them have been tortured and treated as chattel. Even those who have managed to escape remain deeply traumatized.

Donatella Rovera, Amnesty’s senior crisis response adviser