Terrified from encountering her former captor, she fled back to Northern Iraq where a few members of her family still live. Most of her family, taken by ISIS, have never returned.
Germany should treat this story with the utmost seriousness. German investigators should make their way to Northern Iraq, a relatively safe area under Kurdish control, and interview this young woman. She should be brought back to Germany, if she agrees. If not, the investigation should still continue. Surely with the high tech country that Germany has become, there are sufficient photographs of Iraqi refugees that were settled in the area where the young Yazidi saw her captor. Every effort should be made to identify the rapist captor.
Germany should also reach out to the small number of Yazidis that have been settled in Germany, and to Yazidis living elsewhere that survived ISIS, to develop a database of ISIS offenders. The murderers and rapists that blended in with the refugee population that was settled in Germany and in other European countries should be ferreted out. They should know no rest.
There are enough survivors (Yazidis and others) of the ISIS genocide and enslavement that a thorough database can be established of ISIS murderers, slave owners and rapists. When Germany lost WW2, many Nazi war criminals blended in with refugee populations. Some made their way to the United States and other countries where they lived out their lives peacefully, never having been brought to justice.
No such peace should be granted murderers, slave owners, slave traders and rapists. They never must know security in Germany.
No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.