Manitoba

​Rescued from ISIS, Yazidi boy longs to rejoin mother in Canada

A Yazidi boy rescued from the battlefield in Mosul after three years in ISIS captivity has asked to be reunited with his mother, who was granted asylum in Canada after escaping from the militants herself.
Imad Tammo was captured by Islamic State militants along with his family in the summer of 2014. (REUTERS)

A Yazidi boy rescued from the battlefield in Mosul after three years in ISIS captivity has asked to be reunited with his mother, who was granted asylum in Canada after escaping from the militants herself.

"I want to go to my mother in Canada. I haven't seen her in three years," said Imad, who was wounded in June when a mortar landed near him. (REUTERS)

Twelve year-old Imad Tammo was captured by Islamic State in Iraq and Syria along with his family in the summer of 2014 when the militants overran the Sinjar area in northern Iraq, purging its Yazidi population.
 
Thousands of Yazidi women were enslaved by the militants, who killed hundreds of adult men and took boys including Imad away for military and ideological training. The United Nations has said it constitutes genocide.
 
"I want to go to my mother in Canada. I haven't seen her in three years," said Imad, who was wounded in June when a mortar landed near him in Mosul's Old City.

 The militant who was holding Imad took him to a hospital, where he was operated on, Tammo said.
 
As the battle for Mosul drew to an end earlier this month, Imad's uncle received a call saying that his nephew had been 
found alive by Iraqi forces.

Imad Mishko Tamo has been separated from his mother since August 2014. His brother and father are still missing. (Facebook)

Asked how the militants had treated him, Imad said: "Some of them were good and some of them were bad." His elder brother and father are still missing. 

The uncle, Barzan Tammo, who is now caring for Imad, said the boy's mother had learned from photographs circulated on social media that her son had been rescued and called him to check if it was true.

"I told her: 'I am standing next to him, you can talk to him,'" Tammo said.

"She spoke to him, and burst into tears. I told her: 'don't cry, he is free from Daesh and he is fine. He will soon be with you again."

Nofa Mihlo Rafo arrived in Winnipeg with four of her six children in February. (Lyza Sale/CBC)