Mass graves of suspected Daesh victims found in Iraq's Hawija

Daesh was forced out of Hawija – a district in northern Iraq – by Iraqi forces in October in an offensive that has seen the group lose the vast bulk of territory it seized in 2014.

Iraqi forces search the site of a suspected mass grave containing the remains of victims of Daesh, south west of Hawija, November 11, 2017
AFP

Iraqi forces search the site of a suspected mass grave containing the remains of victims of Daesh, south west of Hawija, November 11, 2017

Mass graves containing at least 400 suspected Daesh victims have been found near the former militant bastion of Hawija in northern Iraq, the regional governor said Saturday. 

The string of grisly discoveries was made at a military base around three kilometres from the city that the militants "turned into an execution ground", said Kirkuk governor Rakan Said.

"Not less than 400 people were executed," he said, adding that some were clad in the uniform of prisoners condemned to death while others wore civilian clothing. 

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Daesh was forced out of Hawija – 240 kilometres north of Baghdad – by Iraqi forces in October in a sweeping offensive that has seen the group lose the vast bulk of territory it seized in 2014.

As government troops have advanced across Iraq they have uncovered dozens of mass graves holding hundreds of bodies in areas that fell under the militants' brutal rule. 

The burial pits near Hawija were discovered "thanks to witness accounts from local residents" given to the Iraqi military, General Mortada al-Luwaibi said. 

Saad Abbas, a farmer from the area, said that during the three years of Daesh control the group's fighters could be seen "driving around in cars with their prisoners".

"They would shoot them and then throw them to the ground or burn their bodies," Abbas said. 

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