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ICC Note: The United Nations released a Joint Report providing details of ISIS’s 3,500 slaves being held under tortuous conditions.  Among the slaves are Christians from Northern Iraq, and many areas of Syria.  The report lists the brutal and violent executions, including those of child soldiers, carried out by ISIS against its “population” of slaves.

01/19/2016 Iraq (Reuters)-An estimated 3,500 people, mainly women and children, are believed to be held as slaves in Iraq by Islamic State militants who impose a harsh rule marked by gruesome public executions, the United Nations said on Tuesday.

The militant group, which also controls large parts of neighboring Syria, has committed widespread abuses that may “in some instances, amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity, and possibly genocide,” the report said.

The U.N. Assistance Mission for Iraq and the U.N. human rights office estimated that 3,500 people were “currently being held in slavery by ISIL”.

“Those being held are predominantly women and children and come primarily from the Yezidi community, but a number are also from other ethnic and religious minority communities,” said the joint report issued in Geneva.

The report detailed executions by shooting, beheading, bulldozing, burning alive and throwing people off the top of buildings.  It said the United Nations had information about the murder of child soldiers and had verified reports suggesting between 800 and 900 children in Mosul had been abducted for military and religious training.

“Even the obscene casualty figures fail to accurately reflect exactly how terribly civilians are suffering in Iraq,” U.N. human rights chief Zeid Ra’ad Al Hussein said in a statement.

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