ISIS Commander: Fighters Abducted Over 100 Yazidi Women, Children

ISIS Commander: Fighters Abducted Over 100 Yazidi Women, Children
Iraqi Yazidis, who fled their homes a week ago when Islamic State (IS) militants attacked the town of Sinjar, gather inside a building under construction where they found refuge on August 10, 2014 in the Kurdish city of Dohuk in Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region. 'The Kurdish peshmerga forces have succeeded in making 30,000 Yazidis who fled Mount Sinjar, most of them women and children, cross into Syria and return to Kurdistan,' said Shawkat Barbahari, a Kurdhish official who is in charge of the Fishkhabur crossing with Syria. AFP PHOTO/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE (Photo credit should read AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/Getty Images)
Iraqi Yazidis, who fled their homes a week ago when Islamic State (IS) militants attacked the town of Sinjar, gather inside a building under construction where they found refuge on August 10, 2014 in the Kurdish city of Dohuk in Iraq's autonomous Kurdistan region. 'The Kurdish peshmerga forces have succeeded in making 30,000 Yazidis who fled Mount Sinjar, most of them women and children, cross into Syria and return to Kurdistan,' said Shawkat Barbahari, a Kurdhish official who is in charge of the Fishkhabur crossing with Syria. AFP PHOTO/AHMAD AL-RUBAYE (Photo credit should read AHMAD AL-RUBAYE/AFP/Getty Images)

Islamic State fighters abducted over 100 Yazidi women and children when they captured the northern Iraqi town of Sinjar last week, a senior commander in the group told CNN on Wednesday.

Militants from the Islamic State, formerly known as ISIS, killed many of the Yazidi men in Sinjar and have taken the women and children to Mosul, a city controlled by the extremist group, the commander said in a telephone interview with CNN.

Earlier, a spokesman for Iraq's Human Rights Ministry said hundreds of Yazidi women below the age of 35 had been taken captive and are being held in schools in Mosul.

A U.S. official, speaking on condition of anonymity, told the Associated Press that the women were kidnapped so that they can be sold or married off to extremist fighters.

Tens of thousands of Yazidis -- members of a minority group deemed heretical by the Islamic State -- fled their homes earlier this month as the militants advanced through northern Iraq.

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