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Iraq Before the UN Human Rights Council: Promises Without Accountability

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Iraq Before the UN Human Rights Council: Promises Without Accountability By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com In January 2025, Iraq appeared before the United Nations Human Rights Council for its fourth Universal Periodic Review — a moment that should have marked a turning point. It did not. The UPR process, designed to hold governments accountable to their international human rights obligations, produced 263 recommendations from 93 countries. Iraq accepted 181 of them. On paper, that looks like progress. In practice, it continues a pattern that anyone who has watched Iraq's human rights record knows well: accept the recommendations, ignore the implementation. What the UN Recommended The recommendations issued to Iraq in January 2025 were not new. Many had appeared in the previous cycle — in 2019 — and in the cycle before that. They included: Imposing a moratorium on executions and ending the use of th...

Bir Alou Antar: What Iraq's Newest Mass Grave Site Is Telling Us — and What It Cannot Yet Say

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AUGUST 28, 2024 · HUSSEIN MONITOR Bir Alou Antar: What Iraq's Newest Mass Grave Site Is Telling Us — and What It Cannot Yet Say Between May and August 2024, UNITAD and Iraqi forensic teams excavated a natural sinkhole near Tal Afar known as Bir Alou Antar. It is one of the final excavations UNITAD will conduct before its mandate ends next month. What the site has revealed — and what it has left unanswered — tells us as much about the limits of justice as about the crimes themselves. What Is Bir Alou Antar? Bir Alou Antar — the name translates roughly as "the well of Antar" — is a natural limestone sinkhole located in the agricultural terrain surrounding Tal Afar in northwestern Iraq's Nineveh Governorate. Sinkholes of this kind are common geological features in the region, formed over centuries by the dissolution of limestone bedrock. When ISIS occupied Tal Afar and the surrounding areas in June 2014, these sinkholes became something else: dispos...

Iraq's Minorities and the Constitution: Rights on Paper, Reality on the Ground

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Iraq's Minorities and the Constitution: Rights on Paper, Reality on the Ground By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com "The laws guarantee rights, but they are not applied." These words came not from a foreign critic or an opposition activist, but from Jabbar Awaid al-Karbouli, head of the Erbil office of the Iraqi High Commission for Human Rights — the body officially responsible for monitoring rights protection in Iraq. When the state's own human rights institution describes implementation failure as the defining problem, the gap between constitutional promise and lived reality is not a matter of interpretation. It is a documented institutional verdict. Iraq's 2005 constitution contains significant protections for minorities. It guarantees freedom of religion. It protects administrative, political, cultural, and educational rights. It declares Iraq a country of multiple nationalities, religio...

Ten Years Since the Fall of Tal Afar: A Community Displaced, Women Still Missing, and Justice Still Waiting

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JUNE 15, 2024 · HUSSEIN MONITOR Ten Years Since the Fall of Tal Afar: A Community Displaced, Women Still Missing, and Justice Still Waiting In June 2014, ISIS seized Tal Afar and erased a community in days. Ten years later, more than 1,300 people remain missing — including over 400 Turkmen women and girls taken into sexual slavery. The city was liberated in 2017. But for the families still waiting, liberation has not meant justice, return, or closure. June 2014: The Fall The images from June 2014 are still vivid for those who lived them. ISIS convoys moving west from Mosul. Iraqi security forces collapsing. Families loading what they could carry onto trucks and fleeing toward Kirkuk, Erbil, and the Turkish border. Tal Afar — a city of over 200,000 people, predominantly Shia Turkmen, located 63 kilometers west of Mosul — fell within days. What followed was systematic: men separated from women, executions at the city's edges, and the organized abduction of women...

68 Mass Graves, 10 Years, and Still No Justice: Iraq's Unfinished Reckoning with ISIS

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68 Mass Graves, 10 Years, and Still No Justice: Iraq's Unfinished Reckoning with ISIS Between 2018 and 2024, UNITAD and Iraqi authorities jointly excavated 68 mass grave sites across Iraq. Each site tells a story of systematic murder. Yet a decade after ISIS committed its worst atrocities, not a single senior commander has been convicted specifically for the crimes documented in those graves. This is the story of evidence without justice. The Scale of the Crime When ISIS swept across northern and western Iraq in 2014, it left behind a landscape of death. Thousands were executed in mass killings — at Camp Speicher near Tikrit (1,700 killed), in Sinjar (Yazidi men and boys), in Tal Afar (Turkmen civilians), and in dozens of villages across Nineveh, Kirkuk, and Saladin provinces. The bodies were buried in sinkholes, riverbeds, abandoned buildings, and open desert. Many sites were not discovered until years after liberation — some only when displaced families returned h...

Europe Can Prosecute ISIS — And It Should: The Case for Universal Jurisdiction

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Europe Can Prosecute ISIS — And It Should: The Case for Universal Jurisdiction While Iraq's judiciary struggles with the scale and complexity of ISIS crimes, European courts have a legal tool that could change the equation: universal jurisdiction. Under this principle, courts in Germany, France, Sweden, and other EU states can try individuals for crimes against humanity and genocide — regardless of where the crimes occurred. The question is no longer whether they can. It is whether they will. What Is Universal Jurisdiction? Universal jurisdiction is a principle of international law that allows national courts to prosecute individuals for the most serious crimes — genocide, crimes against humanity, war crimes, and torture — regardless of where the crime occurred, the nationality of the perpetrator, or the nationality of the victim. The principle rests on a simple but powerful idea: some crimes are so grave that they offend all of humanity. When the state where the cr...

UNITAD Is Closing: Who Protects the Witnesses Now?

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UNITAD Is Closing: Who Protects the Witnesses Now? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com On September 17, 2024, the United Nations Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by Da'esh (UNITAD) will close its doors. Seven years of work. Thousands of pieces of evidence. Hundreds of witness testimonies. Sixty-eight mass grave sites excavated. And not a single case of international crimes adjudicated in Iraq. Not one. The closure of UNITAD is the end of something important. But what concerns the people who gave testimony — the Yazidi survivors, the Turkmen witnesses, the families of the massacred — is not the institution. It is the question that comes after it: who protects them now? Why UNITAD Is Closing The answer is both simple and revealing. In September 2023, Iraq requested that the UN Security Council renew UNITAD's mandate for one final year — with no possibility of extensio...

Transitional Justice in Iraq: Illusion or Reality?

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Transitional Justice in Iraq: Illusion or Reality? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Iraq has had 23 amnesties between 1975 and 2016. It has had dozens of prosecutions, multiple truth commissions, a special tribunal for Saddam Hussein, a Yazidi Survivors Law, and years of UNITAD investigations. It has received hundreds of UN recommendations on accountability and human rights reform. It has accepted most of them. And yet, for the survivors of Iraq's worst atrocities — the Yazidi genocide, the Turkmen massacres, the Christian displacement, the Shabak and Mandaean persecution — justice remains largely theoretical. Not coming soon. Not delayed. Theoretical. The question worth asking in 2024 is not whether Iraq has transitional justice mechanisms. It does. The question is whether those mechanisms have produced anything that survivors would recognize as justice. The Gap Between Law and Reality The Internat...

Kirkuk After the Agreement: Has the Conflict Really Ended?

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Kirkuk After the Agreement: Has the Conflict Really Ended? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Kirkuk has been called "an ethnic powder keg waiting to explode." In August and September 2023, it came closer to that explosion than at any point since 2017 — and the fuse was lit not by armed groups or foreign interference, but by a political decision made in Baghdad. When Prime Minister al-Sudani ordered Iraqi security forces to hand over a building in Kirkuk city to the Kurdistan Democratic Party, Arab and Turkmen residents took to the streets. Four Kurdish protesters were killed in the clashes that followed. Iraq's Supreme Court halted the handover. The crisis subsided — temporarily. But the underlying conflict did not end. It rarely does in Kirkuk. Why Kirkuk Is Different Kirkuk is not simply a contested city. It is a condensed version of Iraq's unresolved political identity — home to approx...

Sinjar: Ten Years After the Genocide — What Has Changed?

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Sinjar: Ten Years After the Genocide — What Has Changed? By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com On August 3, 2014, ISIS launched a coordinated attack on Sinjar. Within days, approximately 5,000 Yazidi men had been executed. Around 6,800 women and children had been kidnapped and entered into a system of sexual slavery. The world watched, named it genocide, and promised that things would be different. Ten years later, the question is not whether things have changed. Some things have. The question is whether the change has been enough — and honest accounting of the answer is uncomfortable. What Has Changed The most significant change is the defeat of ISIS as a territorial entity. The group that controlled nearly a third of Iraq no longer holds Sinjar. Iraqi security forces, with international support, retook the city in November 2015. That is not nothing. For the survivors still alive, the immediate threat of ensl...

Born in Captivity: The Children ISIS Left Behind and the State That Refuses to Recognize Them

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Born in Captivity: The Children ISIS Left Behind and the State That Refuses to Recognize Them By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com She was 24 years old, living in an overcrowded displacement camp in Sheikhan, Iraq, looking at pictures of her two children — a six-year-old boy and a four-year-old girl. It had been four months since she last saw them. To come home, she had left them behind. This is the impossible choice that Iraqi law imposes on Yazidi women who survived ISIS captivity and bore children during it: return to your community, or keep your children. The law does not allow both. The Legal Trap Under Iraq's National Card Law, a child born to one Muslim parent — even as a result of rape — must be registered as Muslim. For Yazidi women who were sexually enslaved by ISIS fighters, this means that any child born in captivity is automatically designated Muslim under Iraqi law, regardless of the mother...

Iraq's IDP Camps: Open Prisons for a Million People

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Iraq's IDP Camps: Open Prisons for a Million People By Hussein Zainulabdeen | Independent Researcher — Iraqi Minority Rights | husseinmonitor.com Nearly a decade after ISIS swept through northern Iraq, approximately 1.2 million Iraqis remain internally displaced. Ninety percent of them have not been able to return home for more than three years. Seventy percent have been displaced for more than five years. These are not refugees fleeing a war that is still happening. They are people trapped — unable to go back, unable to move forward — in a limbo that the Iraqi government has decided to resolve not by fixing the conditions that make return impossible, but by closing the camps and calling the problem solved. The Scale of Displacement As of early 2023, more than 173,000 internally displaced persons were living in 26 formal camp locations across Iraq. Another 983,000 were living in urban settings — informal displacement that is harder to count and easier to ignore....