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UN Votes to Help Iraq Collect Evidence Against Islamic State

Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari called it "a victory for justice, a victory for humanity and a victory for the victims"

U.N. investigators will help Iraq collect evidence to build potential war crimes cases against Islamic State extremists, under a resolution the Security Council approved Thursday.

Iraq, council members and some human rights advocates portrayed the measure as a key step toward bringing the Islamic State group to justice for atrocities. But some major rights groups say it's one-sided and overlooks abuses by Iraqi and other forces fighting the IS militants.

The council voted unanimously to ask the U.N. to establish an investigative team to help Iraq preserve evidence "that may amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity and genocide" committed by ISIS, variously known as ISIL and Daesh.

"This means justice for those people who have been victimized by ISIS," Nadia Murad, a former ISIS captive in Iraq, said in a Facebook Live video after attending the council vote with well-known human rights lawyer Amal Clooney.

Iraqi Foreign Minister Ibrahim al-Jaafari called it "a victory for justice, a victory for humanity and a victory for the victims."

ISIS militants seized parts of Iraq in 2014 and proclaimed it a caliphate under Islamic rule. It soon became a realm of horrors, including mass killings, beheadings and rapes.

U.S.-backed Iraqi forces retook the country's second-largest city of Mosul from the extremists in July. The forces have now driven ISIS from most of the land it had seized in Iraq, retaking all the major urban areas, although the group still controls some pockets in Iraq as well as territory in Syria.

Iraq and Britain have spearheaded the investigative measure. After it passed, Alastair Burt, the British minister of state for the Middle East, announced that the U.K. would provide 1 million pounds ($1.35 million) to the investigative effort.

It has a prominent champion in Clooney, who represents members of Iraq's Yazidi religious minority who were raped and kidnapped by Islamic State militants.

"It's a huge milestone for all of those who've been fighting for justice for victims of crimes committed by ISIS," the British attorney, who is married to actor George Clooney, said in the Facebook Live video. "It says to victims that their voices will be heard and they may finally get their day in court."

U.N. investigators will be able to help identify victims and perpetrators and "provide an indispensable record of the scope and scale" of ISIS atrocities, U.S. Ambassador Nikki Haley said. Burt said the measure gives priority to Iraqi courts to try the cases but left a door open for other courts to get involved.

But Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch said it came up short.

"No one denies the importance of tackling the widespread atrocities by ISIS in Iraq, but ignoring abuses by Iraqi and international forces is not only flawed, it's shortsighted," said Balkees Jarrah, the rights group's senior international justice lawyer. "The pursuit of justice is essential to all victims ... regardless of who is responsible."

Amnesty International's New York head, Sherine Tadros, said the resolution "threatens to entrench a dangerous culture of 'victor's justice.' "

Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi has admitted that anti-ISIS forces have committed abuses, but he insists they were not "systematic" and that those responsible are being held accountable. Human Rights Watch, however, says many such abuses aren't being investigated by authorities in Iraq, as far as the group can tell.

The British U.N. mission said in a statement that given the severity of ISIS's atrocities, it's vital to take steps now to keep evidence from being lost.

"We need to act where we can, when we can," the mission said.

Associated Press writers Alexandra Olson at the United Nations and Susannah George in Baghdad contributed.

Copyright AP - Associated Press
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