UN has reports of Iraqis escaping Fallujah being abused, killed

UN human rights chief calls for Iraqi government to protect civilians amid reports of physical violations and abuse against civilian Iraqi men and boys attempting to flee IS-held Fallujah.

Iraq, Fallujah, June

Iraqi soldiers help families from a vehicle outside an Iraqi army military camp near Fallujah after being displaced on Friday, June 3, 2016 Source: AAP

The United Nations has "extremely distressing, credible reports" of Iraqi men and boys being abused by armed groups working with Iraqi security forces after escaping from the Islamic State-held town of Fallujah, a senior UN official said on Tuesday.

The Iraqi army is assaulting Fallujah, a bastion of Islamic State militants close to Baghdad, while US- and Russian-backed forces are conducting separate offensives against the Sunni Muslim jihadists in neighboring Syria.

UN human rights chief Zeid Ra'ad al Hussein said in a statement that were also allegations of executions of men and boys who had fled Fallujah into surrounding territory controlled by government forces and their Shi'ite Muslim militia allies.
"Eyewitnesses have described how armed groups operating in support of the Iraqi security forces are... detaining the males for 'security screening'," Zeid said.

"(This) in some cases degenerates into physical violations and other forms of abuse, apparently in order to elicit forced confessions."

People escaping the town had suffered "two and a half years of living hell" under Islamic State rule and faced not just enormous danger in escaping but also "double jeopardy in the form of serious human rights violations", Zeid said.

Iraqi authorities have a legitimate interest in vetting anyone fleeing Islamic State-held areas to be sure they were not a security risk or suspected of involvement in atrocities, but the process had to be carried out by legal organs, Zeid said.

“It is paramount that all individuals fleeing the violence around Fallujah must be assumed to be civilians without links to armed groups, unless there is clear and cogent evidence to the contrary,” he said.

Zeid called on Iraq's Shi'ite-led government to immediately take concrete steps to ensure it was putting into practice its pledges to protect civilians - Fallujah's population is mainly Sunni - and bring people to justice for violating human rights.

 

(Reporting by Tom Miles; Editing by Mark Heinrich)

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Source: Reuters


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