More than 1,000 Killed in 17 Days in Iraq, Says U.N.
إقرأ هذا الخبر بالعربيةMore than 1,000 people -- at least three-quarters of them civilians -- were killed this month as Islamist militants swept through large swathes of northern and western Iraq, the United Nations said Tuesday.
At least 1,075 people were killed and 658 were injured in the country in the 17 days from June 5 to 22, Rupert Colville, a spokesman for the U.N. human rights office told reporters in Geneva.
He said the numbers "should be viewed very much as a minimum."
At least 757 civilians were killed and another 599 injured in the provinces of Nineveh, Diyala and Salah al-Din, he said.
A number of the deaths were due to "verified summary executions and extra-judicial killings of civilians, police, and soldiers who were hors combat."
At least 318 more people -- not necessarily all civilians -- had been killed and 590 injured in Baghdad and areas in the south, "many of them as a result of at least six separate vehicle-borne bombs," he said.
Militants, led by jihadists from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant, or ISIL, have since early June overrun major areas of five provinces and driven to within less than 100 kilometers (60 miles) of Baghdad.
The militant onslaught has displaced hundreds of thousands of people, alarmed world leaders, and put Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki under pressure at home and abroad.
In addition to the killings, abductions by the brutal jihadist group, which has roots in Al-Qaida, are also reportedly continuing across the affected provinces, Colville said.
Many foreigners are among those abducted, including the 48 Turkish citizens snatched from Ankara's consulate when ISIL captured Mosul, and around 40 Indian nationals working for an Iraqi construction company who were kidnapped on June 18, according to India's foreign ministry.
While some of those who had been abducted had since been released, including 16 Georgians working for an Iraqi communications company, Colville decried that bodies of some abductees were also turning up, many with gunshots to the back of the head.
He pointed to the dozens of videos broadcast by ISIL claiming to show mass executions, beheadings and other atrocities targeting off-duty soldiers, police officers and civilians on the basis of their religion or ethnicity.
The Iraqi army, which is struggling to hold its ground in the face of the jihadist onslaught, has also carried out serious abuses, Colville said.
Iraqi forces have allegedly carried out "at least two summary executions of prisoners," he said, pointing to one as yet unconfirmed at the al-Qalaa police station in the Shiite-majority northern town Tal Afar, where 31 detainees were reportedly killed on June 15.
The U.N. mission in Iraq had meanwhile confirmed another summary execution of prisoners by Iraqi forces as they withdrew from Mosul, Colville said, adding that the troops had reportedly thrown grenades into a room filled with detainees, killing at least 10 people and injuring 14.
"We urge the Iraqi authorities to swiftly carry out their obligation to thoroughly investigate these, and any other, reported summary executions," Colville said, demanding efforts "to bring all perpetrators to justice."