MillenniumPost
World

IS executes 16 traders on Iraqi road

The Islamic State group has executed 16 Iraqi traders taking food from the city of Baiji to the government-controlled western city of Haditha, officials said on Sunday.

“Daesh executed 16 Haditha traders last night,” the mayor of the city, Abdelhakim al-Jughaifi, told AFP by phone.

“The victims were transporting mostly food goods, such as vegetables, from Baiji to Haditha,” he said. Baiji, which lies on the Tigris about 200 kilometres north of Baghdad, is under IS control.
Haditha, which sits on the Euphrates about 130 kilometres southwest, is the last major city in the province of Anbar still under government control.

“They were stopped at a checkpoint and abducted,” the mayor said. “They then executed them, some by shooting them, others by slitting their throats.”  He said Haditha residents found the bodies on the road and were able to bring them back. A police lieutenant colonel confirmed the 16 executions. The victims were buried today, several sources said.

Abu <g data-gr-id="26">Maath</g> al-Jughaifi, a tribal fighter from Haditha, said a paper was found on one of the bodies in which IS said the executions were to avenge the deaths of jihadist fighters during a recent battle near Haditha. According to government sources, at least 23 IS militants were killed in clashes in <g data-gr-id="27">Khasfa</g> last week, including two French nationals who drove suicide truck bombs.

Haditha is isolated in Anbar, where IS controls the border with Syria to the west and most of the land to the east, including the provincial capital Ramadi, which they seized on May 17. 

Rampant jihadists firm up control of Iraq-Syria border

The Islamic State group took full control of a border crossing between Iraq and Syria on Sunday, tightening its grip on the heart of its self-proclaimed caliphate.
The move gave IS control of the two main roads between Syria and Iraq’s province of Anbar, as the jihadists pressed their most devastating offensive in months. The latest success came a week after IS captured the Iraqi city of Ramadi and days after it seized the historic Syrian city of Palmyra, two of the group’s most significant military victories in almost a year.  agencies
Next Story
Share it