Arab Times

Coalition airstrikes kill several senior Islamic State ‘leaders’

US-trained Iraqi unit carried out Mosul executions: HRW

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WASHINGTON, July 27, (Agencies): Coalition airstrikes recently killed several senior propagandi­sts and facilitato­rs of the so-called Islamic State, according to a statement from US Central Command (CENTCOM).

“The removal of these key ISIS leaders disrupts ISIS’s propaganda production, distributi­on, and the ability to fund ISIS’ terrorist activities,” it said.

Abu Sulayman Al Iraqi, a senior IS propaganda official, was killed near Mosul in early July. He provided strategic guidance and oversight for IS propaganda that recruited members around the world.

Bassam Al Jayfus, handled IS funds and was killed in Mayadin, Syria in July. His death caused a “disruption” to IS’ money laundering network used to pay foreign fighters for terror plots, CENTCOM said.

Rayaan Meshaal was killed by a strike also near Mayadin, he served as the founder as Amaq, IS’ official propaganda media outlet.

The statement listed five others killed who were all noted to have worked in IS’ media and propaganda arms.

Degrades

“The deaths of these terrorists eliminates senior leaders and facilitato­rs with extensive experience and training, and degrades ISIS’s ability to plan and conduct attacks on civilian targets in Iraq and Syria, as well throughout the region and in the West,” CENTCOM affirmed.

Meanwhile, an Iraqi army division trained by American forces summarily executed prisoners in west Mosul, Human Rights Watch said Thursday, calling for US assistance to the unit to be suspended.

The latest report of executions comes after the release of videos allegedly shot in the Mosul area that appeared to show Iraqi forces executing one detainee and brutally beating others.

Iraq declared victory in Mosul on July 11, but abuses by security forces and the anger they stoke could pose a potentiall­y major threat to long-term stability in an area that was only just recaptured from the Islamic State group.

“An Iraqi army division trained by the United States government allegedly executed several dozen prisoners in Mosul’s Old City,” HRW said in a statement, referring to an area on its western side.

“Two internatio­nal observers detailed the summary killings of four people by the Iraqi army’s 16th Division in mid-July 2017, and saw evidence that the unit had executed many more people, including a boy,” the watchdog said. The internatio­nal US-led coalition against IS has provided training, advice and other assistance to various Iraqi units.

“The US government should make sure it is no longer providing assistance to the Iraqi unit responsibl­e for this spate of executions,” Sarah Leah Whitson, HRW’s Middle East director, said in the statement.

Earlier in July, HRW found a series of videos posted online that appeared to show other abuses by Iraqi forces in the Mosul area.

In one clip, men in Iraqi army uniforms beat a bearded detainee, drag him to the edge of a cliff, throw him off and shoot him and another body at the bottom.

Three other videos show men in army and police uniforms beating detainees.

Earlier in the Mosul operation, an Iraqi journalist embedded with the Rapid Response Division reported that members of the special forces unit carried out torture, rapes and killings.

The journalist, who has since left Iraq, documented some of the abuses on film.

IS overran Mosul and swathes of other territory in the summer of 2014, but Iraqi forces backed by US-led air strikes have since regained much of the territory they lost.

Widespread anger among Iraqi Sunni Arabs — over issues including abuses by security forces — helped aid the jihadist resurgence which culminated in the 2014 offensive.

Abuses by security forces now are likewise a boon to IS, which is thought likely to increasing­ly revert to bombings and hit-and-run attacks as its cross-border statehood project continues to fall apart.

In Mosul, the missing are everywhere, their families hunting through the ruined Iraqi city for traces of lost husbands and wives, parents and children, brothers and sisters.

 ??  ?? Iraqi boys attend a class at a school in west Mosul on July 27. (AFP)
Iraqi boys attend a class at a school in west Mosul on July 27. (AFP)

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