A mass grave containing the bodies of 150 members of a Sunni tribe which fought the Islamic State (IS) group has been discovered in central Iraq, security officials said on Thursday.
Islamic State militants took the men from their villages to the city of Ramadi and killed them on Wednesday night and buried them, an official in a police operations centre and another security official told Reuters.
In a separate case, witnesses said they found 70 corpses from the same Albu Nimr tribe near the town of Hit in the Sunni heartland Anbar province. Security officials there were not immediately available for comment.
Most of the victims found near Hit were members of the police or an anti-Islamic State Sunni force called Sahwa (Awakening).
“Early this morning we found those corpses and we have been told by some Islamic State militants that ‘those people are from Sahwa, who fought your brothers the Islamic State, and this is the punishment of anybody fighting Islamic State’,” an eyewitness said.
Tribal sheikhs from Albu Nimr say both sets of victims were among more than 300 men aged between 18 and 55 who were seized by Islamic State this week.
Iraq’s Shiite-led government wants Sunni tribal leaders to back the armed forces in the war against Islamic State militants who are notorious for beheading or executing anyone opposed to their radical ideology.
News of the bodies’ discovery came as the first group of Iraqi Kurdish peshmerga fighters entered the besieged Syrian town of Kobane on Thursday to help push back the Islamic State group, which has defied US air strikes and threatened to massacre its Kurdish defenders.
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