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German court imprisons IS bride for crimes against humanity

October 25, 2021

A Bavarian court has handed a 10-year prison sentence to a German woman who allowed a 5-year-old Yazidi "slave" girl to die of thirst.

https://p.dw.com/p/428cr
Jennifer W. arrives for one of the last days of her trial
Jennifer W. failed to intervene when her husband chained a 5-year-old girl outside and let her die of thirstImage: Sebastian Widmann/Getty Images

The Munich Higher Regional Court has imprisoned a German woman for 10 years after hearing she stood idly by as a 5-year-old Yazidi "slave" girl was left to die of thirst in the sun.

Monday's conviction of the 30-year-old Jennifer W. is one the first anywhere in the world related to the persecution of the Yazidi community by the "Islamic State" (IS) terrorist group.

What did the court hear?

The court found Jennifer W. guilty of "two crimes against humanity in the form of enslavement," as well as aiding and abetting the girl's killing by failing to intervene.

The 30-year-old and her "Islamic State" (IS) husband Taha A.-J. "purchased" a Yazidi woman and child in 2015. They were kept as household "slaves" while the couple were living in IS-occupied Mosul.

"After the girl fell ill and wet her mattress, the husband of the accused chained her up outside as punishment and let the child die an agonizing death of thirst in the scorching heat," prosecutors said during the trial. "The accused allowed her husband to do so and did nothing to save the girl."

Looking for kidnapped Yazidis

Jennifer W., originally from Lohne in the German state of Lower Saxony, grew up as a Protestant but converted to Islam in 2013.

She made her way to Iraq through Turkey and Syria in 2014 to join IS. As a member of the extremist group's "morality police" in 2015, she patrolled parks in Fallujah and Mosul, armed with an assault rifle and a pistol as well as an explosive vest.

Prosecutors said her task was to look for women who did not conform with the group's strict codes of behavior and dress, prosecutors said.

Jennifer W. was taken into custody and deported back to Germany while trying to renew her identity papers at the German Embassy in Ankara in 2016.

Husband also faces verdict

Jennifer W.'s husband is on trial in separate proceedings in Frankfurt. The verdict there is due in late November.

Identified only by her first name, Nora, the girl's mother has testified in both Munich and Frankfurt about the torment allegedly visited on her child. During her testimony, the girl's mother said she was forced to watch her daughter die.

Taha A.-J. was arrested in Greece in May 2019 under a German arrest warrant and was transferred to Germany in October. His ongoing trial — the first against a former IS militant to deal with the IS genocide of the Yazidi — has attracted international attention.

Yazidis killed and enslaved

Syria and Iraq's Yazidi minorities were subjected to mass killings, abductions and sexual slavery at the hands of IS. The ethnic group follows a religion that includes elements of Christianity, Judaism and Islam. The ultraconservative Islamic militants consider them to be subhuman devil worshipers.

In July, a court in Hamburg sentenced the widow of an IS terrorist to extra jail time for using enslaved Yazidi girls to clean her home. She had already been convicted of being a part of the militant organization. 

rc/aw (AFP, dpa)