Mosul battle: IS hangs bodies of 40 civilians from poles in Iraqi city

EDITED BY KALAHAN DENG

Militants in Iraqi city Mosul directed anger and defeated against innocent people who are being hanged for no abuse reason.

So-called Islamic State (IS) shot dead 40 civilians on Tuesday in the northern Iraqi city of Mosul after accusing them of treason, the United Nations says.

Their bodies were then hung from electricity poles in several districts, the office of the UN Human Rights Commissioner said, citing sources.

A man was also reportedly shot dead in public in central Mosul for ignoring an IS ban on using mobile phones.

Iraqi security forces are continuing their push to take Mosul back from IS.

The killings of the civilians appeared to have been carried out on the orders of self-appointed “courts”, according to the UN report.The 40 civilians were accused of “treason and collaboration” and dressed in orange clothes marked in red with the words “traitors and agents of the ISF” (Iraqi Security Forces).

The UN says 20 civilians were also shot dead on Wednesday evening at the Ghabat military base in northern Mosul, supposedly for leaking information.

A house in Bashiqa, northern Iraq, used by Islamic State and now recaptured by government forces, 10 November 2016
Image captionA house used by IS and recaptured by Iraqi forces east of Mosul

The UN also expressed concern at IS’s deployment of teenagers and young boys. Children are apparently seen in an IS video issued on Wednesday shooting dead four people for spying.

IS also announced on 6 November that it had beheaded seven militants for deserting the battlefield in the Kokjali district of eastern Mosul, the UN says.

Among the sources cited for the UN’s information was a man who played dead during a mass killing by IS fighters.

UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Zeid Raad al-Hussein called for the government to “act quickly to restore effective law enforcement in areas retaken from ISIL [IS] to ensure that captured fighters and their perceived supporters are dealt with according to the law”.

Large quantities of ammonia and sulphur, for possible use in chemical weapons, is being stockpiled by IS and stored near civilians, the UN said.