Former
Congressman Frank Wolf: Indict Baghdadi & Jihadi John for Genocide
by John Rossomando
IPT News
September 25, 2015
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If Attorney General
Loretta Lynch can indict the head of FIFA, global soccer's governing body,
then she should be able to indict the Islamic State's self-described
caliph, Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi, and "Jihadi John" for genocide,
said former U.S. Rep. Frank Wolf.
Wolf wrote to Lynch Sept. 8 calling on her to take action.
He believes that the grisly murders of Americans Steven Sotloff, Peter
Kassig, James Foley and the brutal torture and killing of aid worker Kayla
Mueller give the U.S. jurisdiction to try Al-Baghdadi and "Jihadi
John."
"Given the overwhelming and publicly available evidence of
genocide, I call upon your office to initiate a thorough investigation into
individuals who may be criminally liable under U.S. law for genocide and
other serious human rights abuses such as slavery," Wolf wrote. "... I would urge you to announce that even
where there may not be jurisdiction to prosecute under U.S. law, you will
endeavor to work with foreign prosecutorial authorities to initiate
criminal proceedings in countries that may have legal jurisdiction."
The U.S. government has a history of indicting foreigners who kill
Americans. Indicting them would send the message that the U.S. will bring
those who do so to justice, Wolf told the Investigative Project on
Terrorism.
A five-day trip to the front lines in the region in January inspired his
letter. There he saw the human tragedy first hand. Wolf, along with a group
from the 21st Century Wilberforce Initiative, where he is a
distinguished senior fellow, interviewed about 75 people including several
Yazidi girls. The experience left him certain that the Islamic State had
perpetrated genocide and believing legal action was required.
After World War II, he said, the world promised to never let genocide
like the Holocaust happen again. But the world did not keep its promise in
places like Cambodia's killing fields; the massacre at Srebrenica in
Bosnia; the Rwandan genocide and the ongoing genocide against Christians,
Yazidis and other religious minorities.
The Wilberforce Initiative works to enhance religious freedom throughout
the world. It's a continuation of work Wolf did in the House, where he was
a longtime leader of the bipartisan Congressional Human Rights Caucus,
which later became the Tom Lantos Human Rights Commission.
Wolf is not alone calling the Islamic State's actions
"genocide." President Obama used the term himself last year. Wolf wrote a separate letter to the president in July asking
him to bring the genocide issue before the United Nations Security Council.
What is happening in Iraq and Syria resembles the situation in the
former Yugoslavia during the 1990s, where former Serbian President Slobodan
Milosevic systematically ethnically cleansed Croats, Bosnian Muslims and
Albanians. Baghdadi, "Jihadi John" and other Islamic State
leaders should also be indicted by the International Criminal Court in The
Hague, Netherlands, Wolf said.
His letter notes that the Islamic State's actions meet all of the
criteria in the 1948 U.N. genocide treaty. These atrocities include: mass
killings of religious minorities, implementation of a convert-or-die policy
for religious minorities, sexual enslavement of Yazidi women, kidnapping
Christian and Yazidi children as young as seven months, brainwashing
children to be child soldiers and exiling religious minorities from their
homes.
But that doesn't mean America should solely leave it up to the U.N. body
to bring them to justice. ISIS leaders should be hunted down and taken back
to the U.S. for trial, Wolf said.
"If not for crimes committed against humanity as a whole, the
United States must at least seek justice for such horrific crimes against
her own people," Wolf wrote. "The United States Department of Justice
should be a beacon of justice and the rule of law to American citizens and
citizens of the world alike. Therefore, it cannot stand by as genocide is
flagrantly committed and American citizens are the victims of crimes
against humanity."
Thus far Wolf has not had any response from Lynch's office and is taking
a wait-and-see approach with regard to her office any taking action.
Wolf holds deep reservations, however, toward the administration's
policies toward religious minorities.
This includes the Obama administration's prior failure to highlight
Christian persecution at the hands of Islamist terrorists. He took the
administration to task for previously glossing over the fact the Egyptians killed by the Islamic State in Libya last
February were Coptic Christians and the 148 Kenyans killed by al-Shabaab in April were Christians.
"It seems that there is a sort of reluctance for the administration
to say [that they were Christians]," Wolf said.
He also expressed frustration with what he sees as the administration's
slow walking of implementing the last bill he passed in Congress. Under
that law, the president was supposed to have appointed a special envoy to
advocate for persecuted Christians and other religious minorities in places
like Iran and Pakistan.
"Thirteen months have gone by, and nobody has been appointed to
that position," Wolf said. "I don't know why they haven't put
anybody in to advocate because this person would also advocate for Muslims
who are being persecuted.
"It would be a central location for people to go for aid, like if
there is a crisis, like on Sinjar Mountain with the Yazidis, where they
could go to coordinate."
His bill passed with bipartisan support and was co-sponsored by U.S.
Rep. Anna Eshoo, D-Calif. Nonetheless, the slot remains unfilled and Wolf
wants to know why.
Related Topics: John
Rossomando, Frank
Wolf, ISIS,
genocide,
Abu
Bakr al-Baghdadi, Jihadi
John, 21st
Century Wilberforce Initiative, Loretta
Lynch, Christian
persecution, Yazidis,
Anna
Eshoo, Tom
Lantos Human Rights Commission
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