I believe so, because as you can see, all eyes are on Mosul right now. For example, all NGOs are heading there, yet Yazidis remain in these camps. They are not able to register with the UN agencies to emigrate. They're not able to return home because the conditions are not there. The security is not there. About 70,000 Yazidis have returned to Sinjar. I was there just recently. To get from Dohuk, where the IDP camps are, it takes you about six to seven hours. You have to go through eight checkpoints. There are many militia groups controlling these areas including the PMU, the PKK, and the Kurdish militias. There is no specific control of the Iraqi government over that area.
The reconstruction is not done. About 49 mass graves containing the remains of Yazidis were discovered. Those mass graves are not protected. They're not examined. There is a UN team that is supposedly going to Iraq and working on the mass graves, collecting the evidence and investigating ISIS crimes. I met with the head of the team in New York last week, Mr. Karim Khan, who is fighting very hard to go and get the work done but is not able to find the funding support from the UN or from the international community.