Canada's Kurdish allies are deliberately destroying Iraq villages, Amnesty says
They are harrowing accounts of destruction and displacement, across Northern Iraq -- and not by the hands of Islamic State fighters.
Amnesty International released a report Wednesday that details how Kurdish Peshmerga forces have been conducting a "revenge" campaign on at least 13 villages where Arab civilians live. The report is based on testimony of 100 eyewitnesses and victims, who report that forces are razing villages, and forcing thousands from their homes.
Amnesty says the violence could amount to war crimes.
They're the same Peshmerga fighters that have been working closely in the region with the Canadian Special Operations Forces Command in the fight against ISIS.
As It Happens host Carol Off spoke with Amnesty International's senior crisis advisor Donatella Rovera. Here's part of that conversation.
Carol Off: Canadian military forces are very active in the area you've reported on, and they've been training Kurdish Peshmerga fighters — the very ones you are also talking about here. And of all the coalition players in the region, we understand the [Canadian Forces] have been the closest, most intimately involved with the fighters — going right into combat areas with them. Is it possible that the Canadians would not know about this?
Donatella Rovera: I don't know. I mean, obviously, only they can answer your question. I think that if anyone wants to know, it is not so difficult to know. Because these areas are accessible, they are under Peshmerga control. In the same way that I was able to go there — to take photographs, to take video — so can anybody else. [But] specifically to those countries that are providing military support to the Peshmerga forces, we are asking for them to use their good offices, to raise these concerns with the Kurdish authorities — with the view to ensuring that these practices stop immediately. And also, that they make sure any military assistance that is provided to the Peshmerga forces is not used in any way to commit these sort of crimes.
CO: If the Canadian Forces know that there are revenge attacks going on, what is their responsibility?
DR: Their responsibility is to denounce this crime, if they're aware of them. And their responsibility is to raise these crimes, to document them, and to ensure that none of the assistance they're providing is in any way helping to commit such crimes.
As It Happens has requested interviews with Canada's Minister of Foreign Affairs Stephane Dion and Minister of Defence Harjit Sajjan. They were not available.