OFWI Global Snapshot - June 2021

WATCH: OFWI Global Snapshot - June 2021

Join Majed El Shafie on OFWI’s YouTube Channel to watch the OFWI Global Snapshot for June 2021.

This month, Majed reflects on the challenges operating as a human rights organization throughout the COVID-19 pandemic, and how grateful everyone at OFWI is for your support and being part of the OFWI family.

His updates on operations includes:

  • Uyghur concentration camp survivors testify to U.S. State Dept

  • OFWI's humanitarian efforts in Armenia & Karabakh

  • Relief & aid efforts to Yazidi refugees in Iraq & Syria

You can watch the full video below, but be sure to Subscribe on YouTube so you never miss an OFWI video.

Heartwarming Homecoming

Adiba guides members of OFWI’s Iraq chapter, coordinating relief efforts supporting Yazidis in a refugee camp.

Adiba guides members of OFWI’s Iraq chapter, coordinating relief efforts supporting Yazidis in a refugee camp.

ISIS Genocide Survivor Returns to Iraq to Support Yazidi Community

We wanted to share a heartwarming story with you. Before we do, we want to provide context for those who may not have followed the plight of Yazidis at the hands of ISIS closely.

For those unfamiliar, in the summer of 2014, ISIS stormed Mount Sinjar and began a genocidal campaign against the Yazidi people in their ancestral homeland located in Northern Iraq. For the past seven years One Free World International has been there for the Yazidi people. It's been a struggle that OFWI supporters have made possible, overcoming tremendous challenges.

The death and destruction ISIS inflicted was savage. The enslavement of Yazidi women and young girls was inhumane. The indiscriminate murder of men and older Yazidis was callous. For a harrowing overview, revisit this National Post feature written by veteran reporter Adrian Humphreys: When ISIL came to town: Yazidis tell of child murders and 'meat markets' for sex slaves.

Working with Kurdish tribes in Iraq and Syria, and with the support of your donations and spreading the word to build awareness, OFWI has helped rescued 648 women, girls and their children from ISIS sex slavery and the human smuggling networks that persisted after the defeat of ISIS.

Our last rescue mission over the 2020 Christmas holidays saved six people from a life of slavery and reunited them with surviving family members or community members in refugee camps populated by Yazidis who survived the genocide.

One of the families OFWI has worked closely with was able to resettle to Canada as refugees. Adiba, her two sisters, and nieces and nephews resettled in Richmond Hill. CTV National News did a feature report on Adiba and her family: Raped, beaten and tortured: Former ISIS sex slave on her journey to new life in Canada

In the winter of 2016, after three months as servant and sex slave to an ISIS fighter named Amin, she caught a break.

It was just after lunchtime and Adiba was cleaning while her captor and his family were in another room. She seized on the chance to escape, despite the risk.

“I didn’t care if I got caught. I didn’t care if I lived or if I died,” she recounted.

An hour later, she ran into a local man who was standing outside his home, and begged him for help.

Abu Muhammed, a married family man, agreed to help Adiba. Instead, he took her to an empty house, where he raped her over the course of about a month.

And then he offered her a deal: he would sell her back to her father for US$15,000.

Adiba arranged a phone call between her captor and her father, who managed to raise the money with the help of family, friends and neighbours.

The mental anguish and scars have been severe. With the support of family, OFWI, and new community in Richmond Hill over the past five years, Adiba and her family’s condition continues to improve. Her niece Dilveen, the main subject of this CBC Short Docs, continues to grow while attending high school in Richmond Hill, Canada.

While some of her family were fortunate to join her Canada, many relatives including her parents remained in Iraq. For five years she has received daily updates. Sometimes it has been jubilation, learning of friends or neighbours who survived and found their way to a refugee camp. Other times, sorrow, news of a death, recent or confirmed victims of the ISIS genocide.

The COVID-19 pandemic has hit Iraq and refugee camps the same as western countries. The difference being they do not have the health system capacity to test, track and treat patients as we do in Canada or the United States. Moved by this struggle, Adiba felt compelled to return to support her community and we are proud to share she has done just that.

Planning Meeting.jpg

Adiba has temporally returned to Iraq. For the past three months she has led an OFWI chapter providing public health best-practices education, PPE, and other humanitarian relief resources to support Yazidis and other religious minorities in refugee camps of Northern Iraq.

We are so proud of Adiba’s courage and drive to support her homeland community in Northern Iraq. It is a legacy OFWI supporters can be proud, not only helping to save lives in a crisis, but investing in recovery so people can help a community regain its footing and thrive once again in the future.

Thank you to all the One Free World International donors and supporters who have been there to make OFWI’s work possible. Thank you to the journalists and media who have covered the plight of Yazidis to bring attention their struggles to help build awareness and mobilize resources so they can rebuild.

In a world bombarded by threats and negative news these days, we hope this story gives you hope and reminds you of what is possible if we come together to address challenges together.

#JusticeForHuma Livestream

#JusticeForHuma Livestream

On March 23, OFWI and the Huma Younus Rescue Coalition held a livestream event to raise awareness for Huma’s case. OFWI’s Majed El Shafie hosted Raheel Raza (Muslims Facing Tomorrow) & Shaan Taseer (Pakistan For All) for an in-depth discussion exploring:

  • Christian Persecution & Weak Rule of Law in Pakistan

  • Hear directly from Huma’s mother in Pakistan

  • Karachi City Court positive ruling and legal next steps

  • How you can help Huma be reunited with her family.

Former Green Party Leader Elizabeth May joined from Parliament Hill in Ottawa.

Re-watch the whole event right here on OFWI.org

Humanitarian Mission to Armenia

Frontlines Testimony: OFWI.org Humanitarian Mission to Armenia

OFWI’s Majed El Shafie pays his respects to victims of the war in the Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan.

OFWI’s Majed El Shafie pays his respects to victims of the war in the Yerablur Military Pantheon in Yerevan.

The devastating impacts of Azerbaijan’s war against the people of Karabakh continues to reverberate. One Free World International embarked on a mission to Armenia to support the Christians forced to flee their homes and assess the acute humanitarian support needs.

OFWI also investigated the reports of war crimes by Azerbaijani forces and the backing they received from Turkey’s military and fighter’s from Syrian-based terrorist organizations.

There is a great need for humanitarian support in the region. What follows are details of our findings and plan of action to support the Christians refugees forced to flee their home.

Continuation of Armenian Genocide

While geopolitics and complicated nuances abound when it comes to war, one thing about this conflict is clear: the historic hostility to Christian populations and Turkic domination in the region is a continuation of the culture that perpetrated the Armenia genocide. The assault on the Armenian people in Karabakh violated International norms for the conduct of war, committed war crimes against people in the region, including rape, and deliberately attacked churches and other holy sites.

Human Victims

While the Russian military blocked our humanitarian mission direct access to the region of Karabakh, during this mission OFWI’s Majed El Shafie was able to meet with families and victims who were forced to flee their homes with the help of translators. Watch the video to hear the details of their stories.

Majed El Shafie interviews a Syrian fighter who took part in Azerbaijan’s attacks in Karabakh.

Majed El Shafie interviews a Syrian fighter who took part in Azerbaijan’s attacks in Karabakh.

Perpetrators

One of the more troubling reports OFWI discovered on this mission was the Turkish military aided the movement of Syrian terrorist organizations and fighters into the region to help wage their assault on the people of Karabakh. OFWI was granted exclusive access to interview some of the fighters who confirmed they were part of allied groups that supported ISIS’ armed efforts in Syria. These Turkey-backed forces have also been responsible for the assaults we have witnessed taking place in northern-Syria against the Kurdish populations in that region. The mobilization of religious-backed militias should be of great concern to the international community who care about international security, stability in the region, and upholding international human rights norms.

Meeting with refugees and injured soldiers

Meeting with refugees and injured soldiers

War Crimes

During this mission, OFWI’s investigation collected evidence of war crimes being committed by Azerbaijan and their military supporters, including:

  • Using forbidden weapons during the war

  • Deliberately and indiscriminately attacking civilian populations

  • Deliberate attacks on churches, hospital, and other religious sites

  • Turkey, as a NATO partner, imported fighters from listed terrorist organizations

  • Inhumane and violent treatment of local populations and captured prisoners of war

  • Evidence of plans for ethnic cleansing to force all ethnic Armenians to flee the area

OFWI will continue to collect evidence and compile a credible report for referral to international authorities in the weeks ahead so that justice can be served.

(pictured) Altar at the Armenian Church adjacent to the military cemetery.

(pictured) Altar at the Armenian Church adjacent to the military cemetery.

Next Steps

OFWI has determined there are over 50,000 Christian refugees who were forced to flee their homes due to this war, most cannot return.

The 50,000 people are civilians forced to flee and injured military personnel, both are unable to return to their homes.

There is an urgent need for necessities of life and medical aid. OFWI has begun planning an aid mission back to the region in the coming weeks. Just as we have done in the past, with your donations and mobilizing partners, we will deliver medical aid and other needed supplies to help them meet the necessities of life and rebuild.

Please help us make this a reality by donating today at https://ofwi.org/donate