Yazda Commends the Exhumation of 13 Yazidi Mass Graves and Kill Sites in Sinjar by Iraqi Authorities

Date: Iraq, 28 April 2025
Sinjar, Iraq, April 28, 2025 - Between February 5 and 22, 2025, Iraqi authorities exhumed 13 mass graves and killing sites in Sinjar and its surrounding areas, including Sinjar City, Tel Azer, and Zumany (Qazelkand area). These efforts focused on uncovering crimes committed during the Yazidi genocide by the self-proclaimed Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL).
The operations were carried out by key national bodies, including the Mass Graves and Missing Directorate (MGMD) [formerly known as the Mass Graves Directorate or MGD], the Medico-Legal Directorate (MLD), and the Commission for Investigation and Gathering Evidence (CIGE) with the support of the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP).
These latest exhumations bring the total number of sites exhumed in Sinjar and Ba’aj to 74 since March 2019.1 According to data collected by Yazda, approximately 14 mass graves and killing sites still await exhumation and this number may rise as returning residents uncover new sites. Those remaining sites are expected to be added by the Iraqi authorities to the national excavation and investigation teams’ annual plan.
Once exhumed, all remains are transferred to the MLD in Baghdad, where forensic experts use DNA matching and family-provided blood samples to identify the victims. When the identification process is complete, the remains are returned to the families for a dignified burial in their hometown, in accordance with Yazidi rites and culture. Since March 2019, the remains of 734 victims have been exhumed from mass graves containing Yazidi victims; while 275 victims were already identified, 459 are still awaiting identification.
Yazda commends the ongoing efforts of Iraqi institutions in exhuming mass grave sites and helping to bring closure to the families of mass atrocity victims.
Over a decade now, Yazda has played a central role in documenting, supporting, and advocating for the exhumation and identification of Yazidi genocide victims. Since 2015, Yazda has documented mass graves and kill sites, publishing two key reports—Mass Graves of Yazidis Killed by the Islamic State Organization (2016) and Working Against the Clock (2018). Yazda has provided on-site support during exhumations through its Mobile Medical Unit (MMU) which offered ongoing medical and mental health assistance to families throughout both exhumation and burial processes, ensuring culturally sensitive, trauma-informed care and helping families navigate the path toward justice and closure.
Over 10 years after the beginning of ISIL’s genocidal campaign in Sinjar, Yazda:
- Urges all relevant actors to join their efforts in finalizing the exhumation of the remaining mass graves and killing sites in Sinjar and Ba'aj districts as well as all over Iraq.
- Calls on the Iraqi Government to provide MGMD and MLD with the adequate budget to finalize the exhumation process in Sinjar and Ba'aj districts by the end of 2025 and the identification process of all the remains exhumed. Similar support must be provided to both teams to complete their work across the country and assist other communities, including by exhuming sites related to crimes committed by groups other than ISIL.
- Calls on the international community to provide technical and financial support to Iraqi teams to speed up the exhumation and identification process.
- Encourages third countries where families of the missing relocated, including Australia, Germany, the Netherlands, the United States of America and France, to coordinate with Iraqi authorities and organize blood sample campaigns to support the identification process.
- Urges all actors involved to adopt a culturally sensitive, trauma-informed approach. This ensures that Yazidi families are treated with dignity and respect, supports their emotional and psychological well-being, and helps them navigate the path toward justice and closure in a way that honors their traditions and lived experiences.
Healing cannot take place without the return and dignified burial of all the victims of ISIL crimes, but also without the establishment of truth and meaningful and participatory justice. Revealing the fate of missing loved ones is essential to honoring the rights of their families and is a key step toward healing and closure. Finding the missing and identifying all the victims of the genocide committed by ISIL should be the priority of the Iraqi Government and of the international community.
-END-
Download this press release here.
Read this Press Release in Arabic here.
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About Yazda:
Yazda is a non-governmental, non-profit organization that was established in 2014 in response to the genocide committed by the self-declared Islamic State (ISIS) against the Yazidis and other minorities in Iraq. Yazda manages a portfolio of humanitarian, justice, advocacy, and development-related projects, all of which are community and survivor-centered in terms of design and implementation. Since its inception, Yazda has been working with local and international partners to provide humanitarian, accountability, and advocacy services to vulnerable minority groups in Iraq in their post-genocide recovery. The organization has been operating in Iraq since October 2014 and has main offices in Duhok in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq and a branch office in Sinjar in Nineveh Province. Yazda is registered as a non-profit organization in the United States, the United Kingdom, Iraq, Kurdistan Region of Iraq. Over the past 8 years, Yazda has grown to employ around 80 staff on average, received support from numerous donors, both institutional and individual, and has reached tens of thousands of direct and indirect beneficiaries through its programs and initiatives.




