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Yazidi survivor of IS slavery aims to be ‘voice’ of her people

Lamia Haji Bashar won the European Parliament’s prestigious Sakharov human rights prize with another Yazidi survivor, Nadia Murad/AFP

STUTTGART, Germany, Oct 28 – A Yazidi teenager who escaped the Islamic State group after nearly two years of enslavement said Friday the prospect of one day becoming a “voice” for her community saw her through the nightmarish ordeal.

Lamia Haji Bashar, who on Thursday won the European Parliament’s prestigious Sakharov human rights prize with another Yazidi survivor, told AFP she had long envisioned fleeing her jihadist captors, who had repeatedly raped, tortured and sold her.

“I had in front of my eyes how to escape from all these criminal people, (from) what was happening with all the women and girls,” she said in an interview in Germany where she has been receiving medical treatment.

“To give my voice and be the voice of all these victims and get out this was the big driving force for me to escape,” she said, speaking Kurdish on the sidelines of an aid conference through a translator.

Bashar, who has deep facial scars and lost an eye due to horrific burns from a landmine during her escape, said the Sakharov prize had given her strength.

“I feel more powerful because now I feel that people are behind me. There are many people who have sympathy with what I am trying to do,” she said, adding that she hoped to become a schoolteacher as well as an activist.

Bashar, 18, will share the honour with Nadia Murad, who was also abducted and enslaved by IS and has since become a global advocate for the Yazidi people.

The prize, worth 50,000 euros ($55,000), will be presented at a ceremony on December 14 in Strasbourg.

“It is so important for me not for me personally it is important for those women and girls, victims of IS, whether they are still in captivity or have escaped,” Bashar said.

Lamia Haji Bashar (L) escaped her jihadist captors who repeatedly raped, tortured and sold her/AFP

“I will accept this award in the name of all these victims.”

Yazidis are followers of an ancient religion with more than half a million believers concentrated in northern Iraq.

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According to UN experts, around 3,200 Yazidis are still being held by IS, the majority of them in war-ravaged Syria.

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