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Concerns rise over execution of IS militants

Captured members of the Islamic State in Iraq are being executed, increasing the possibility of mass killings of civilians and destroying Iraq's future as a unitary state.
Kurdish Peshmerga female fighters practise the procedure of dealing with prisoners during combat skills training before being deployed to fight Islamic State militants, at their military camp in Sulaimaniya, northern Iraq September 18, 2014. REUTERS/Ahmed Jadallah (IRAQ - Tags: CIVIL UNREST CONFLICT MILITARY TPX IMAGES OF THE DAY) - RTR46QER
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It is no secret that the Islamic State is merciless toward prisoners of war held in Iraq and Syria, often killing them in mass executions. Reports reaching Al-Monitor from Iraq indicate that Iraqi security forces are themselves executing IS fighters they capture or who surrender. The same fate awaits Sunni civilians accused of collaborating with IS, as happened during the fierce battle for Tikrit. Media reports have also implicated Kurdish peshmerga and Shiite militias in executing captured IS militants and allied local civilians.

On top of such actions, there are no families publicly shedding tears for IS fighters, and there is no international body monitoring their fate. Although an occasional meek voice rises from the Muslim world, it is disturbing that there has been no concerted reaction to this type of violence in Iraq. It is unclear as well whether the United States has a clear, standing policy on the legal status and treatment of captured or surrendered IS militants.

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