The Iraqi children 'drinking their parents' BLOOD to stay alive': How refugees stranded on Mount Sinjar are cutting their hands to save their young



Horrific stories of 30,000 Yazidis trapped by Islamic State jihadists emerge after 8,000 escape down the mountain



Hundreds of families have made it across border into Turkey and Syria after trekking for days in 45C temperatures

Minority sect has been sent scattering in all directions after Islamic State jihadists stormed their town a week ago

Some families have been forced to pay smugglers to take them through rivers and minefields to make it to safety

Another 130 U.S. troops have arrived in Iraq to assess the crisis facing 30,000 Yazidis trapped on Mount Sinjar

British Government also remained under pressure to consider military intervention to rescue the refugees


Children trapped on a mountain by Islamic State militants in Iraq are drinking blood from their parents to stay alive, it emerged today.

Their horrendous plight was revealed after some 8,000 Yazidis were finally able to escape down Mount Sinjar where they have been under siege from jihadist fighters for the last week.

Those fleeing have made it to relative safety at a camp in Dohuk Province in Kurdistan, where they have told horrific stories of the 30,000 who have been left behind.

Sky News correspondent Sherine Tadros, who is at the camp, said: 'One man has just told us how he saw four children die of thirst.

'There was nowhere to bury them on the mountain so they just put rocks on their bodies.

'Another man was saying the children were so thirsty, their parents started cutting their own hands and giving them blood to drink.'

Desperate: Displaced Yazidis are clawing for food and drink to stay alive in the desert, with children allegedly drinking their parents' blood

Those fleeing have made it to relative safety at a camp in Dohuk Province in Kurdistan, where they have told horrific stories of the 30,000 left behind Hundreds of other families have also made it across the border after trekking for hundreds of kilometres through sweltering temperatures to safety They are being given food, water and medical treatment at shelters in Turkey and Syria after being driven out of their town by ISIS more than a week ago Hundreds of other families have also made it across the border after trekking for hundreds of kilometres through sweltering temperatures to safety. They are being given food, water and medical treatment at shelters in Turkey and Syria after being driven out of their town by ISIS more than a week ago.

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Next Incredible moment brave Kurdish reporter walks out into No... Iraqi helicopter carrying aid to Yazidi refugees stranded on... You're not too young to die: British jihadists in bid to... Share this article Share Some have been forced to pay smugglers their life savings to take them on perilous journeys across the border into Turkey, sometimes through minefields.

They are among several gruelling treks to freedom the community has taken after they were sent scattering to the four corners by the insurgency, which has trapped around 30,000 others on Sinjar Mountain with no food or water. Refuge at last: Displaced Iraqis from the Yazidi community look for clothes to wear among items provided by a charity organisation at the Nowruz camp, in Derike, Syria Fleeing jihad: Syrian Kurdish fighters battled Islamic State militants to carve an escape route to tens of thousands trapped on a mountain top Displaced: Thousands of Yazidis have trekked for hundreds of kilometres to make it across the border after they were driven from their town by ISIS more than a week ago Scattered: A graphic showing the various escape routes the Yazidis have taken, often through hundreds of kilometres of desert terrain, after being attacked by ISIS

Around 2,000 Yazidis have made it to a refugee camp in Derabon, a small village near Zakho on the Iraqi Kurdistan-Turkey border.

But with no passports, many are having to sit tight and hope the uprising is crushed or pay smugglers to help them avoid the official border crossing at Habur.

One mother who suffers agonising rheumatism told how she and her three young children waded through the Tigris River, tip-toed her way through a minefield and climbed through a barbed-wire fence to make it into Turkey.

Half-way through the five-hour journey, Amal said the smuggler wanted her children to leave her behind because she was too slow, but they chose to carry her instead.

The 43-year-old told The Times: 'My sons gathered around me and they refused. We were not afraid of dying there. We were afraid of dying at the hands of the Islamic State.'

Another teenager has not been so lucky.

Amer Omar Pajo said he watched his father get shot in the head by ISIS gunmen as they fled to the mountains and his mother later succumbed to dehydration.

Taking shelter: Iraqi Yazidi refugees escaping from attacks by the Islamic State settle into their makeshift home in the Turkish city of Sirnak Ms Greening, who announced £8 million in new assistance last week: said: 'As thousands of Iraqi people remain cut off away from their homes, we are focused on getting help to those in need, particularly those trapped on Mount Sinjar. 'After last night the RAF have successfully made five drops, including thousands of containers filled with clean water that can also be used to purify dirty water and hundreds of shelter kits.' Islamic State, which sees Shi'ites as heretics who deserve death, has seized a series of towns in northern Iraq, in a sweeping advance that has left the Iraqi government reeling and prompted tens of thousands to flee. The group has declared religious rule in a caliphate straddling Syria and Iraq, offering both Christians and members of the ancient Yazidi sect, whom it calls 'devil worshippers', the stark choice between conversion to Islam or death.

It came as a former senior Iraqi politician warned that the country risks becoming another Syria unless a way to preserve its unity is found. Hajem Hassani, previously speaker in the Iraqi parliament, said if the society did not come together, it would leave the door wide open to the Islamic State (IS). He told BBC Radio 4's Today programme: 'This is probably one of the hardest times Iraq is facing. 'If we don't come together, then probably we will open the door too wide for the IS or other terrorist organisations. 'We need to take the control...(or) it definitely will take us to the Syrian path if we are not very careful and finding ways to solve the problems.' Asked whether newly-appointed prime minister Haider Abadi understood the need for an inclusive government, he replied: 'He should do.'

Sustenance: Refugees who fled across the border wait to receive food after reaching a camp in the city of Sirnak in Turkey's Silopi district

Meanwhile, unrest continued in Baghdad, where Iraqi troops imposed heightened security as international support mounted for a new prime minister to replace Nouri al-Maliki, who has called on the armed forces to stay out of politics amid fears of a possible coup.

Tanks and Humvees were positioned on Baghdad bridges and at major intersections on Wednesday, with security personnel more visible than usual. About 100 pro-Maliki demonstrators took to Firdous Square in the capital, pledging their allegiance to him.

The embattled premier has grown increasingly isolated, with Iraqi politicians and much of the international community lining up behind Haider al-Abadi, a fellow member of his Shiite Dawa party tasked by the president with forming a new government that can unite the country in the face of an onslaught by Sunni militants.



Widespread discontent with al-Maliki's divisive rule has reached the point where both Saudi Arabia and Iran - regional rivals often bitterly divided over Iraq - have expressed support for al-Abadi. The United States, the European Union and the United Nations have also expressed support for new leadership.



But al-Maliki, whose bloc won the most votes in April elections, has thus far refused to step aside and rejected the appointment of al-Abadi as unconstitutional.

