in Iraq, a tribal leader and security official said on Saturday, part of a mass killing campaign launched last week to break local resistance to the group's territorial advances.
Tribal chief Sheikh Naeem al-Ga'oud told Reuters Islamic State had killed 50 members of Albu Nimr who were fleeing the group in Anbar province on Friday. A further 35 bodies were found in a mass grave, a security official said.
Islamic State has executed a total of more than 300 tribe members in the past few days, Ga'oud and the official said.
The sustained bloodshed appears to demonstrate the group's resilience to the U.S. air strikes that have been targeting its fighters in Iraq and Syria.
Ga'oud said he had repeatedly asked the Shi'ite-led central government in Baghdad for arms but that his pleas were ignored.
Albu Nimr had held out for weeks under siege by Islamic State, but finally ran low on ammunition, fuel and food.
Hundreds of tribal fighters withdrew and the tribe fled
its main village of Zauiyat albu Nimr, but many were intercepted by the
militants who shot them at close range and dumped in mass graves.
Islamic State's
advances have fueled sectarian bombings, kidnappings and shootings which
occur almost daily in Iraq, echoing the peak of a civil war in
2006-2007.
Also
on Saturday, a truck bomb killed 13 people at a vegetable market in the
town of Yusufiya just south of Baghdad, police and medical sources said.
In the
capital's Doura neighborhood, a bomb killed seven people, including four
policemen, security and medical sources said.
ANBAR SQUEEZED BY MILITANTS
In Anbar, fighters have encircled a large air base and the
vital Haditha dam on the Euphrates. They also control territory ranging
from towns on the Syrian border to parts of provincial capital Ramadi
and the lush irrigated rural areas near Baghdad.
Anbar was the main battleground between U.S. Marines and
al Qaeda during the "surge" campaign in 2006-2007, when American troops
enlisted the help of local tribes, including Albu Nimr.
Ga'oud said the 50 tribe members were killed near Tharthar
Lake near a desert area. They had been traveling on foot when they were
intercepted by the Sunni militants.
He said one managed to escape the carnage and get word to tribal leaders.
"Forty of the dead were men. Six women and four children
were killed while trying to protect their husbands and fathers," said
Ga'oud.
His account was confirmed by Faleh al-Essawi, the chief of the security committee of the Anbar Provincial Council.
In the other incident, 35 corpses were found on the
outskirts of Ramadi. "They were handcuffed and blindfolded. Some were
wearing tracksuits and others were wearing dish-dash robes," an
eyewitness told Reuters.
Iraq's Shi'ite Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi wants Sunni
tribal leaders to support the Iraqi army against Islamic State, which
has threatened to march on Baghdad. But mistrust has undermined efforts
to revive an alliance.
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