Iraqi authorities have uncovered a mass grave in Ramadi containing at
least 40 bodies, including women and children, apparently killed by
Islamic State insurgents when they seized the city in May, police and
provincial officials said.
Footage posted on the Facebook page of the provincial police on
Wednesday showed what appeared to be bodies in varying states of decay
being pulled from a shallow grave in the capital of Anbar province which
Iraq's military recaptured last month.
Police chief Major General Hadi Razij spoke in the video about the
grave, and an adviser to the governor confirmed the images were
authentic.
Interior Ministry spokesman Brigadier General Saad Maan
confirmed the reports.
"We believe they were the last to fight #DAESH before #Ramadi fell in
May 2015. Investigation ongoing.", Anbar Governor Sohaib al-Rawi said
in a tweet with a picture of body bags lying in a street. Daesh is the
Arabic acronym for Islamic State, which is also called ISIS or ISIL.
Islamic State overran Ramadi last year as the Iraqi army abandoned
its posts for the second time in less than a year, setting back
government efforts to push back the ultra-hardline Sunni militants.
The military, backed by US-led coalition air strikes, recaptured the
city in December, but widespread destruction and explosives planted by
the insurgents in streets and houses have prevented civilians from
returning.
Several mass graves have been uncovered in areas retaken from Islamic
State, which imposes strict restrictions and harsh punishments on the
millions of civilians living under its control.
The United Nations has said the militants are responsible for acts
that may amount to war crimes, crimes against humanity and possibly
genocide.
Muhannad Haimour, the governor's adviser, said in an interview that at least 15 of
the bodies, which were discovered in the central district of
al-Jamaaiya, belonged to police officers, according to ID cards
retrieved from the grave.
He said not all the bodies had been identified, but some were believed to belong to women and children related to the police.
Haimour said the grave was discovered through interrogations with captured Islamic State militants.
It was not clear how the victims were killed, but the video appeared
to show some of them had been handcuffed at the time of death. Haimour
said there were signs of torture and gunshot wounds on some bodies, but
that could not be immediately confirmed.
Ramadi is the largest city retaken from Islamic State since the
insurgents swept across large swathes of Iraq and neighboring Syria in
mid-2014, declaring a modern-day caliphate and killing or capturing
thousands of people.
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