Iraqi security forces have discovered two mass graves near the city of Mosul containing around 250 bodies, police said Thursday.The graves were found near the town of Hammam al-Alil and were created by ISIS militants, Iraqi Federal Police Commander Brig. Gen. Faris Radhi Abbas told
CNN. Their discovery follows the uncovering of 100 decapitated bodies in another mass grave near the same town on November 7.
Hammam
al-Alil is on the Tigris River around 30 kilometers (19 miles) south of
Mosul. It was liberated by Iraqi Federal Police about 10 days ago.
Iraqi forces entered Mosul on November 3 in an operation to free the city from more than two years of ISIS rule. One of the mass graves mentioned on Thursday was discovered inside a well.
"We believe the well contains more than
200 bodies. ISIS used this mass grave to kill and dump people over the
past two years," Abbas told CNN.
"ISIS
terrorists have also planted bombs around this mass grave to prevent
family members from recovering the bodies of their loved ones," Abbas
said, adding that security forces were still working to defuse bombs
around the site.
Abdulrahamn al
Wagga from the Nineveh Provincial Council told CNN that the authority
had heard reports of the mass grave in a well over the past two years.
"Some
of the victims were thrown alive by ISIS into this well and some others
were left there to die from their injuries," al Wagga said.
Abbas said the second mass grave was discovered near Hammam al-Alil and contained about 45 bodies.
Thursday marked one month since the
offensive to retake Mosul was launched by an Iraqi-led coalition
involving around 100,000 people.
Iraqi
forces have faced fierce clashes with ISIS militants in Mosul, as well
as improvised explosive devices, booby traps and snipers.
Late Wednesday, Iraqi paramilitary forces said they had recaptured a strategic airbase outside the northern city of Tal Afar.
After
Baghdad, Mosul is Iraq's second-most-populous city, with 1.2 million
residents. Aid agencies have warned that the push to liberate the city
could trigger a new refugee crisis.
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