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Vian Dakhill also revealed during an emotional TV interview that a ten-year-old girl was raped to death by evil jihadists in front of her father and five sisters.
ISIS zealots believe they are free to murder, rape, torture and abuse Yazidi women because they are considered devil worshippers by many in the Middle East.
The politician told Egyptian TV channel Extra News: “One of the women we managed to retrieve from ISIS said that she was held in a cellar for three days without food or water.
“Afterwards, they brought her a plate of rice and meat, she ate the food because she was very hungry.”
She added: “When she was finished they said to her: ‘We cooked your one-year-old son that we took from you, and this is what you just ate’.”
The male interviewer paused for a moment to wipe tears from his eyes as she recounted the terror group’s atrocity.
She then told the station about the appalling murder of a little girl, revealing: “One of the girls said that they took six of her sisters.
“Her younger sister, a ten-year-old girl, was raped to death in front of her father and sisters. She was ten-years-old.
“The question that we ask ourselves is: ‘Why? Why did these savages do this to us?’.”
She also revealed that her people were buying captive women and girls back from ISIS thugs.
Ms Dakhill added: “One (ISIS terrorist) may call and say he holds a certain girl and wants to sell her. They call the girl’s family and we buy her.
“I apologise for using this word. We buy them.
“We, the Yazidis, in the 21st century, buy our daughters and our women.”
Dakhill, the only Yazidi in the Iraqi Parliament, gained international attention when she made a plea for international assistance for Yazidis trapped by ISIS on Sinjar Mountain.
She accused ISIS of genocide against the Yazidi people.
Yazidism is an ancient faith that integrates some Islamic beliefs with elements of Zoroastrianism, the ancient Persian religion, and Mithraism, a religion originating in the Eastern Mediterranean.
Yazidis began to face accusations of devil worship from Muslims in the late 16th and early 17th centuries.
While the Yazidis believe in one god, a central figure in their faith is Tawusi Melek, an angel who defies God and serves as an intermediary between man and the divine.
The Yazidi account of Tawusi Melek often sounds like the Qof Shaytan - the devil in the Koran - even though Tawusi Melek is a force for good in the Yazidi religion.