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Canada to welcome 1,200 Yazidi refugees from Iraq

Vulnerable religious minority targeted by Islamic State as heretics, being taken in by Ottawa at ‘controlled pace’

Two Yazidi families being greeted by local volunteers after a privately sponsored mission called Operation Ezra brought  them to Winnipeg, Manitoba on December 20, 2016 (Nafiya Naso)
Two Yazidi families being greeted by local volunteers after a privately sponsored mission called Operation Ezra brought them to Winnipeg, Manitoba on December 20, 2016 (Nafiya Naso)

OTTAWA, Canada – Canada will resettle 1,200 Yazidi refugees who faced persecution by the Islamic State group, the immigration minister said Tuesday.

Some 400 have already been airlifted to this country.

“Our operation is under way and individual survivors of Daesh have been arriving in Canada for resettlement in the last number of months and this began on October 25, 2016,” said Immigration Minister Ahmed Hussen, using an Arabic name for the Islamic State.

“Our government will resettle approximately 1,200 highly vulnerable survivors of Daesh and their family members in Canada,” he added.

The initiative follows Parliament’s resolution last fall to take in Yazidis facing “genocide” in Iraq at the hands of the Islamic extremist IS group.

The original aim was to bring over women and girls at risk, but Hussen told a news conference that Ottawa had learned that “Daesh has also deliberately targeted boys and as such we are helping to resettle all child survivors of Daesh.”

Hussen said the migrants are arriving on commercial flights at a “controlled pace” to avoid overwhelming Canada’s refugee system.

The operation is expected to cost Can$28 million (US$21 million).

Since coming to power in late 2015, Prime Minister Justin Trudeau’s government has resettled 40,000 Syrian refugees.

The Yazidis taken in have been subjected to comprehensive security checks and medical examinations, Hussen said.

Yazidis are a Kurdish-speaking minority with a pre-Islamic religion thought partly to have its origin in the Zoroastrianism of ancient Persia. They are neither Arab nor Muslim and IS considers them polytheistic heretics.

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