NewsYazidi woman escapes years of captivity: A daring rescue mission

Yazidi woman escapes years of captivity: A daring rescue mission

A 21-year-old woman returned to the country from captivity.
A 21-year-old woman returned to the country from captivity.
Images source: © Getty Images, X

6:31 AM EDT, October 4, 2024, updated: 6:57 AM EDT, October 4, 2024

21-year-old Fawzia Amin Sido, a Yazidi woman who was abducted as a child by Islamic State fighters and forced into marriage with a Hamas member, has returned to her family after years in captivity. Her rescue involved a complex international operation.

Fawzia Amin Sido was only 11 years old when she was kidnapped in August 2014 from her hometown in Iraqi Kurdistan. During the Islamic State's attack on the area inhabited by the Yazidi minority, close to 10,000 people were killed, and thousands of women, including Sido, were forced into gendered slavery.

A 21-year-old Yazidi woman who was held captive in the Hamas-ruled Gaza Strip and subjected to years of abuse by an Isis militant she was forced to marry, was finally reunited with her family, reports "The Independent."

Sido suffered violence by her "husband" for 10 years. She also became a mother of two children. Her situation seemed hopeless, but in 2023, she managed to escape after her husband was killed in an Israeli airstrike. Sido hid in a safe house, waiting for a chance to leave Gaza.

The rescue would not have been possible without an international effort. Aware of her plight, Iraqi authorities sought assistance from the American embassy. As reported by Matthew Miller, spokesman for the U.S. Department of State, Israeli security forces and Jordanian authorities also collaborated in the endeavor. As noted by The Independent, the operation was fraught with logistical challenges and risky decisions. It lasted four months and faced several setbacks.

According to The Jerusalem Post, Fawzia Sido and her children were rescued at the border between Israel and Gaza and were then transported through Israel and Jordan to Iraq. Her return to Sinjar, her hometown in northwestern Iraq, was met with great emotion.

The UN recognized the 2014 attack on the Yazidis in the Sinjar region as genocide. Thousands of Yazidi women, like Fawzia Sido, endured unimaginable suffering related to captivity, killings, and forced slavery. Although Sido and some of these women were rescued, approximately 2,600 Yazidis remain missing.

Sido belongs to the Yazidi religious minority, mainly comprising Kurds living in the border areas of Iraq, Iran, Turkey, Syria, Armenia, and Georgia.