Dohuk, Iraq (CNN)"Hello?"
The voice is muffled, crackly, and barely audible, but the caller's
desperation is clear: "Our situation is very bad and cannot get any
worse."
On the other end of the
phone, Ameena Saeed Hasan offers a lifeline: the chance to plot an
escape from slavery at the hands of ISIS.
Every day, Hasan takes calls like this one. A former Iraqi lawmaker, she is now making it her mission to rescue as many Yazidi women as she can.
When ISIS first captured Mosul, Hasan thought the Yazidi on Mount Sinjar would be safe.
"We said 'Why would they come to Sinjar?'" she recalls. "There is no oil or anything. What would they take?"
But
ISIS fighters did come to Sinjar. There may not have been any oil
reserves for them to steal, but instead they took another of the
region's most important resources: its people.
Islamic
militants captured thousands of Yazidi women and children, and killed
the men. ISIS claims the Quran justifies taking non-Muslim women and
girls captive, and permits their rape.
The
Yazidis, a small Iraqi minority who believe in a single god who created
the Earth and left it in the care of a peacock angel, have been
subjected to large-scale persecution by ISIS, which accuses them of
devil worship.
The United Nations has accused ISIS of committing genocide against the Yazidis.
The families of many of the missing have reached out to Hasan for help.
"People
know me," she explains. "I am from Sinjar and also I am Yazidi. I know
many people who were kidnapped. Some were my relatives, my neighbors,
and they called me."
Together with her
husband, Khalil, Hasan manages a network to smuggle the women out: she
takes the calls, and Khalil makes the dangerous journey to the
Iraq-Syria border to bring them to safety.
So
far, the couple has rescued more than a hundred people. One of the
first was a 35-year-old woman with six children -- all of whom had been
captured, bought and sold in ISIS' slave markets.
In
her desperate call to Hasan, she described what had happened to them:
"They loaded two big trucks from the village and took them somewhere, I
don't know where. When they were loading people on to the truck, a woman
started arguing with them, so they killed her."
Despite her horrific ordeal, the kidnapped woman in this recording was one of the lucky ones -- she got out, eventually.
Others
are not so fortunate. Hasan says many women, repeatedly raped and
abused by their captors, have taken their own lives rather than wait to
be saved.
"We just want them to be
rescued," she says, through tears of sadness and frustration. "Hundreds
of girls have committed suicide.
"I
have some pictures of the girls who have committed suicide ... when they
lose hope for rescue and when ISIS many times sell them and rape them
... I think there is maybe 100. We lost contact with most of them."
Hasan's work has been recognized with an award from the U.S. State Department for the help she's given to ISIS slaves.
U.S.
Secretary of State John Kerry praised her "courageous efforts on behalf
of the Yazidi religious minority in northern Iraq, for insisting that
the world give heed to the horrors that they face, and ... firm
commitment to helping the victims and saving lives."
But she is haunted by the thought of those she could not save.
"I cannot sleep, I cannot forget what has happened to them," she says.
"[They
ask] When will you rescue us? But I don't have the answer. I'm not a
government. I'm not anything. I'm just people. It's very difficult."
Many
have joined the fight against ISIS; instead of bombs and bullets,
Hasan's weapon is her phone; with it, she offers hope, however distant,
and a promise that help is coming.
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