ISIL executed over 200 Iraq tribesmen in recent days

In this file picture, Iraqi tribal fighters take a position behind a berm as they fire at ISIL positions in the Abu Risha district on the northern outskirts of the Iraqi Sunni Muslim city of Ramadi. AFP Photo

The Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) has in recent days executed more than 200 members of an Iraqi tribe that fought against it, officials and a tribal leader said on Nov. 2.
      
Accounts varied as to the exact period in which the Sunni Albu Nimr tribesmen were killed in various areas of Iraq's Anbar province, but the executions were all said to have been carried out within the last 10 days.
     
Police Colonel Shaaban al-Obaidi told AFP that there were more than 200 people killed, while Faleh al-Essawi, the deputy head of the Anbar provincial council, put the toll at 258.
      
The victims, "including women and children, all of them from the Albu Nimr tribe," were killed "during the past three days," Essawi said.
      
"Anyone who carries the Nimrawi family name on his personal ID" is targeted and killed by ISIL, he added, referring to the name carried by members of the tribe.
      
Sheikh Naim al-Kuoud al-Nimrawi, a leader of the tribe, said that 381 of its members were killed "from the 24th of last month until today."       

ISIL has overrun large areas of Anbar, and the killings are likely aimed at discouraging resistance from powerful local tribes, who will be key to any successful bid to retake the province.
      
Pro-government forces have suffered a string of setbacks in Anbar in recent weeks. That has prompted warnings that the province, which stretches from the borders with Jordan and Saudi Arabia to the western approach to Baghdad, could fall entirely.
      
Images said to show the aftermath of some of the killings circulated on Twitter, but their authenticity could not be independently confirmed.
      
One picture that has been circulating in the last...

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