Damascus - Lamara Arkandi
Liberator of Yazidi women Oosman Dnaye denied that he received any foreign aids during the operations to liberate the Yazidi women in Iraq and Syria since ISIS occupation of Iraqi Chenkal city on August 3, 2014. He revealed that the extremist group committed a large number of massacres against hundreds of Yazidi people and kidnapped over seven thousands of women and children to sell them in slavery markets of Mousl.
He added, “I turned to form a cell composed of seven persons to return the kidnapped Yazidi women to their families. The cell succeeded to liberate 432 women and children from the grip of the extremist group since its establishment.”
He added that the cell began with the liberation of seven Yazidi women, as they received information over their existence in a house of two extremist elements in Syria’s Raqqa city. He added that they monitored the house for five days, saying that they managed to help them escape to the Turkish borders with Syria.
He added that the Yazidi people express appreciation and respect to those women who suffered from the brutality of the extremist elements, describing them as saints. He added that the Yazidi young people work to marry from them, saying that they were prisoners for the strongest force of darkness.
He revealed that one of the survivors saw her rapist in Germany during her existence there to receive psychological treatment, saying that she took photos for him and handed them to the security authorities and explained for them the violations he committed against her.
The Kurdish liberator added that the extremist group still has over 3200 female prisoners from the Yazidi group, denying what was published over the role performed by a Jewish Canadian citizen to liberate the Yazidi prisoners. He added that he launched a false campaign through which he collected millions of dollars, while he did not release any of them.
He added that the German government received 1160 released women from the Yazidis in the framework of a program to qualify them for returning to their normal life after what they suffered from during their existence under the control of the extremist group