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Politics

Iraqi Kurds accused of committing mass executions

Alexander Pearson with AFP
February 9, 2018

Human Rights Watch has accused Kurdish peshmerga forces of executing "scores" of detainees in northern Iraq in 2017. The Kurdish Regional Government has denied the allegation.

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Kurdish fighter in Iraq
Image: picture-alliance/AP Photo/B. Janssen

New evidence suggests Kurdish security forces carried out mass executions of suspected "Islamic State" (IS) fighters in northern Iraq in mid-2017, Human Rights Watch said Friday.

The watchdog said peshmerga fighters executed prisoners at two separate locations from August 28 to September 3 after detaining them at a school in Sahel al-Maliha, some 70 kilometers (45 miles) northwest of Mosul.

"The evidence suggests that Asayish [Kurdish] security forces conducted mass executions of captured ISIS suspects night after night for a week, perhaps killing scores or even hundreds of male detainees," said Deputy Middle East Director Lama Fakih, using an alternate acronym for the group.

Read more:  Iraq's political landscape in disarray

The human rights group drew on statements from a retired security force member close to the peshmerga fighters, photographic evidence and satellite imagery to support the accusation.

"Iraqi and KRG authorities should urgently and transparently investigate the allegations of mass executions and hold those responsible to account," Fakih said.

Denial

The KRG denied Kurdish soldiers carried out the killings.

Dindar Zebari, an Iraqi Kurd official, said many IS and peshmerga fighters had been killed in clashes near the Syrian border, adding "the corpses of the killed ISIS members in this fighting were probably brought in one place to be buried."

Human Rights Watch said Zebari's explanation did not account for the fact that many of the bodies showed gunshot wounds in the head and were found in clusters far away from known areas of fighting.