World's first trial for genocide against Yazidis set to conclude in Germany
An unprecedented trial is due to end on Tuesday in
Frankfurt, Germany.
Taha Al-J. is the first alleged jihadist prosecuted for
genocide against the Yazidis.
The Kurdish-speaking minority was persecuted and enslaved by
members of the self-proclaimed Islamic State (IS) group in Iraq and in Syria,
when jihadists controlled large swathes of the Middle Eastern countries'
territories.
An estimated 10,000 Yazidi people were killed in northern
Iraq in the mass atrocities. About 7,000 Yazidi women and girls, some as young
as nine, were enslaved and forcibly transferred to locations in Iraq and
eastern Syria.
Prosecutors say Taha Al-J., a former IS member, enslaved a
Yazidi girl and her mother in Iraq, then tortured and murdered the 5-year old
child in 2015.
If the Frankfurt court concludes that Taha Al-J. committed
genocide, "then it will be the first time that a legal court says that
crimes against Yazidis by IS are genocide," said Natia Navrouzov, Legal
Advocacy Director at global Yazidi NGO Yazda.
While the crimes have been recognised by the United Nations
as amounting to genocide, as well as a few other international and national
bodies, "it hasn't happened yet that a court of law has said what happened
to the Yazidis is a genocide," the lawyer noted.
"For the victims, it would be something really
fabulous. You know, it has been seven years since they've been waiting for
this. So it would be a great milestone for us," she told Euronews.
Euronews explores the implications of the landmark case for
the Yazidis' long quest for justice and the role European countries play in the
process.
What is Taha Al-J. accused of?
Taha Al-J. is an Iraqi national who is believed to have
joined IS in 2013. He and his wife Jennifer W., a German national, were
allegedly members of the Hisbah, IS' moral police.
German prosecutors say Taha Al-J. and Jennifer W.
"purchased" a Yazidi woman and her 5-year old child, Rania, as
household "slaves" in Mosul in 2015.
He is suspected of prohibiting the girl and her mother from
exercising their religion, forcing them to convert to Islam.
The plaintiff's lawyers also say the two were
"subjected to almost daily beatings."
One day, after the girl fell ill and wet her mattress, Taha
Al-J. chained her up outside as punishment and let her die in the scorching
heat, prosecutors said.
Navrouzov told Euronews that the girl died as a consequence
of the heat, thirst and malnourishment.
"She was just weak overall," she said."And
the mother was there, so she saw it," the lawyer added.
The mother of the child has been a key witness in the case
and is represented by lawyers Amal Clooney and Natalie von Wistinghausen at the
trial.
Taha Al-J.'s wife, Jennifer W. was recently convicted in a
separate trial in Munich for failing to undertake any steps to prevent the
death of the child, despite witnessing her husband's act.
Taha Al-J. was arrested in Greece in May 2019 as he was
reportedly trying to apply for refugee status.
"Since Germany had already started the investigation
against Jennifer W., who was his wife, it asked for the extradition of Taha
Al-J.," since both cases are linked, Navrouzov explained.
He was indicted in early 2020 and faces charges of having
committed genocide, crimes against humanity, murder and human trafficking as a
member of a terrorist organisation.
His trial started in April 2020. If convicted, Taha Al-J.
faces life imprisonment.
Reached by Euronews, Taha Al-J.'s lawyer Serkan Alkan said
he and fellow defence lawyer Martin Heising "deny the charges because we
have the feeling our client is used as a representative for the crimes of
IS."
Alkan argued that a lot of information was missing, "up
to the point that it is not clear if anyone has died. We don't have hard proof
for this."
"Furthermore, we think in legal terms in no way he has
fulfilled the requirements of the international criminal law," he added.
What would be the significance of a genocide verdict?
If the Frankfurt court concludes that Taha Al-J. committed
genocide, "we hope that this will have a domino effect, that this will
lead to more trials like this one," said Navrouzov.
But Navrouzov was far from taking a genocide verdict for
granted in this case.
"As a lawyer, I know how hard it is to prove genocide,"
said Navrouzov.
"Of course we know IS committed genocide against the
Yazidi. But in every trial, you have to prove that this particular person had
the intent to commit genocide against the Yazidis. And I think that's always
very hard to prove."
"The court has to be careful about the way they will
communicate on this," she warned.
"If they conclude that they don't have enough proof for
that, they need to make sure they communicate to the Yazidi community in the
correct way and tell them 'we are not saying there is no genocide against the
Yazidis'. We're just saying that for this particular person, there's not enough
proof to say that he had the intent to commit genocide."
Why is the trial taking place in Germany?
"Taha is Iraqi. The victim is Iraqi. The crimes
happened in Iraq. But still, Germany, thanks to the universal jurisdiction
principle, can prosecute," Navrouzov explained.
Under this principle, Berlin allows its court to prosecute
crimes against humanity committed anywhere in the world.
But even European countries that do not have universal
jurisdiction could prosecute their nationals who were so-called "foreign
fighters" in Iraq and Syria, the lawyer added.
Navrouzov told Euronews that Germany is "way ahead of
other countries" as the only nation prosecuting individual IS members.
France launched a case against the Lafarge company, which is
accused of paying millions of euros to jihadist groups in order to keep its
cement factory in Syria running through the early years of the war. But the
case centres on the liability of a company rather than on individual IS
members.
Outside Europe, Iraq is "of course" prosecuting IS
members, Navrouzov said, but only for membership to a terrorist group.
"Unfortunately, in Iraq, there is no legal framework to
prosecute them for international crimes, genocide, war crimes and crimes
against humanity," the lawyer noted. "This is not the justice the
victims want and hope to see."
What are the challenges in bringing such crimes to justice?
Since 2014, Yazda has been relentlessly documenting the
crimes against the Yazidi minority, collecting the testimonies of over 2,000
victims.
The non-profit has played an instrumental role in the Taha
Al-J. case. "We have identified the only victim and the only witness, and
we were able to connect her through our legal team to the German prosecutors
and war crimes unit, "Navrouzov told Euronews.
Those who work to bring the perpetrators of the Yazidi
genocide to justice are facing multiple challenges, the lawyer said.
"One of the main challenges is to identify the
whereabouts of the perpetrators. Where are they? Are they in custody? If yes,
where and if we know where they are, is the country willing to prosecute
them?" Navrouzov asked.
"And another big challenge is to link the IS members to
their real identity because IS members were using kunyas or war names. And we
have thousands of kunyas, war names mentioned in the statements we have
collected. But it's really hard to link them to a real person and then try to
understand if it is the same as the name mentioned in the victims'
statements," she went on.
But the key challenge is above all "political,"
Navrouzov said.
"European countries have been very reluctant to
repatriate their nationals from Iraq and Syria to prosecute them, for different
reasons -- the security of the country, the public opinion is against it,
etc."
"Another argument is that they don't have the evidence
to prosecute them. So they're afraid that if they bring them back, they will
have to release them very quickly because they don't have anything against
them."
"So this is the gap we're trying to fill. We reach out
to these countries and we say, 'these people have also committed crimes against
Yazidis, and that means that they can be prosecuted not only for membership to
a terrorist group, but also for genocide and crimes against humanity, war
crimes, which means that their sentence will be higher. And it also means that
they will be prosecuted in a way that is what Yazidi victims are looking for
and are hoping for."
"Europe does not seem ready for the moment. But I also
think that it's not a sustainable situation. They cannot keep ignoring this
issue," Navrouzov said.
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