Oman Daily Observer

IS summarily executed 13 civilian Iraqis, says HRW

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BAGHDAD: IS fighters “summarily executed” 13 civilians after villagers rose up against them at the start of the Iraqi army’s offensive to retake Mosul, Human Rights Watch said on Tuesday.

The killings took place in the villages of Al Hud and Al Lazzagah, 50 kms south of Mosul on October 17, the day government forces launched the massive operation to oust the extremists from the city.

“ISIS responded to the village uprising by unlawfully executing people captured in the uprising and civilians who weren’t involved,” Lama Fakih, deputy Middle East director at HRW, said in a statement. “Security forces who capture ISIS fighters should properly investigat­e their participat­ion in alleged war crimes like these,” she said, using an alternate acronym for the extremist group.

In total, the IS fighters “summarily executed at least 13 people including two boys,” HRW said. The report included the picture of one of the slain boys, a 13-year-old who had not been involved in the uprising, it said, citing his father Muhammad.

IS had captured Al Hud and Al Lazzagah in June 2014, with villagers saying they lived in constant fear of punishment, including death, for activities like smoking and using mobile phones, said HRW.

As Iraqi forces closed in on the morning of October 17, BAGHDAD: An Iraqi journalist was kidnapped by unidentifi­ed gunmen from her home in Baghdad overnight, police and relatives said on Tuesday, prompting Prime Minister Haider al Abadi to order an investigat­ion.

Afrah al Qaisi is an outspoken critic of government institutio­ns in satirical columns she writes for several local newspapers and media outlets. Qaisi used to work for the pan-Arab, Saudiowned newspaper Asharq al Awsat.

Iraq’s Interior Ministry said in a statement it had formed a team to look into her abduction. The gunmen took Qaisi from the southern Saydiya district of the capital where she lived with her family, according to Ziyad al Ajili, head of the Iraqi Journalist­ic Freedoms Observator­y.

“They separated the children from their mother after forcefully entering the house and took money, jewellery, laptops and her car as they left,” Ajili said.

Her husband was away at the time and the assailants broke into the house after Qaisi refused to open the door.

Iraq is ranked second after Somalia in the Committee to Protect Journalist­s (CPJ) 2016 Index of Impunity, which about 30 villagers attacked the extremists, killing 19 of them, said the New York-based watchdog.

IS fighters began the execution-style killings in the afternoon, leaving bodies lying in the streets. Iraqi forces entered Al Lazzagah that evening and Al Hud the next morning.

Human Rights Watch called on Iraqi security forces to “appropriat­ely investigat­e incidents of alleged war crimes so calculates the number of unsolved murders over a 10-year period as a percentage of each country’s population.

Over the past decade, 71 journalist­s have been killed with impunity in Iraq, according to the CPJ.

Many were victims of insurgents who were active in Iraq even before IS militants overran around one third of the country more than two years ago. But other armed factions, some backed by the government, have grown increasing­ly powerful through their participat­ion in Baghdad’s fight against IS. — Reuters that those responsibl­e, if in government custody, can be fairly prosecuted”. After seizing control of large parts of Iraq and neighbouri­ng Syria in mid-2014, IS declared a cross-border “caliphate”, imposed its harsh interpreta­tion of Islamic law and committed widespread atrocities.

Iraqi forces have been tightening the noose around Mosul since launching the offensive. — AFP

 ?? Reuters ?? Iraqi people escaping from the is stronghold town of Bartella, east of Mosul, on Tuesday. —
Reuters Iraqi people escaping from the is stronghold town of Bartella, east of Mosul, on Tuesday. —

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