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Yezidis Ask For Armenia's Help In Iraq

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  • Yezidis Ask For Armenia's Help In Iraq

    YEZIDIS ASK FOR ARMENIA'S HELP IN IRAQ

    EurasiaNet.org
    Aug 16 2013

    August 16, 2013 - 11:54am, by Giorgi Lomsadze

    Armenia of late has gotten involved helping Diaspora Armenian
    communities caught in the crossfire of civil war in Syria. Now,
    some Armenian citizens want Yerevan to offer the same kind of help
    to their kin in another regional hot spot, Iraq.

    The Yezidis, a Kurdish-speaking people who are Armenia's largest
    minority, hope that Yerevan will raise the awareness of the plight
    of Iraq's Yezidis around the world. Iraqi Yezidis now face violent
    attacks for selling alcohol. Iraqi laws only allow non-Muslims to
    sell alcoholic beverages and the country has witnessed a series of
    deadly militia attacks on liquor stores run by Christians and Yezidis.

    Sasha Sultanian, head of Armenia's Yezidi National Committee, has
    announced that the group plans to ask the Armenian foreign affairs
    and Diaspora ministries to promote awareness of the Iraqi Yezidis'
    situation "in international organizations and [help] prevent the
    massacres," Armradio reported.

    "Our brothers are being killed in Iraq," Armenpress reported Sultanian
    as saying on August 14 "The governments of Kurdistan and Iraq aim to
    destroy the Yezidis living in Iraq and take over their lands."

    Several hundred thousand Yezidis are estimated to live around the
    world; the largest number in Iraq. Their religion is a blend of
    Zoroastrian, Muslim, Christian and other religious traditions. The
    central figure in the faith is a peacock angel Malek Taus, who
    dispenses both blessings and misfortunes as he finds fit.

    Ethnic Yezidis together with ethnic Armenians bore the brunt of the
    World-War I-era slaughters in southeastern Ottoman Turkey. Many fled
    to Armenia and Georgia to escape persecution. Sultanian expressed
    hope that Armenia, given its past, will not stay indifferent to the
    targeted violence against another ethnic group.

    Yerevan has not yet indicated whether or to what extent it might
    choose to stick its head out for the Yezidis of Iraq.

    http://www.eurasianet.org/node/67400

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