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The Beatings Will Continue: Afghan and Iraqi Edtion

ISIS executes 2

ZAKHO – The radical group of Islamic State (ISIS) on Friday executed two Afghan men in the eastern Nangarhar province, after accusing them of fighting alongside pro-government forces in Afghanistan.

ISIS beheaded the two men and released images showing the brutal execution, threatening everyone who backs the Afghan government against its self-declared Caliphate to face a similar punishment once captured by the group.

This comes just two weeks after the Afghan authorities announced the death of prominent ISIS jihadi leader Saad al-Imarati in an operation by the government forces in the Nangarhar province.

Al-Imarati was one of the founders of ISIS branch in Afghanistan and Pakistan, and had led several ISIS attacks against pro-government troops and the Taliban.

ISIS kills fleeing civilians in Kirkuk

KIRKUK: The Daesh group has killed several residents attempting to flee Hawijah, officers and local officials said Friday, as Iraqi forces prepared for an operation against the extremist-held area.

Hundreds of civilians have over the past few days managed to flee the area, which lies west of the Kurdish-controlled city of Kirkuk and about 220 km north of Baghdad.

Hawijah and its surroundings are one of the last major areas east of the Tigris still controlled by IS and possibly the next target of the forces battling the extremists in Iraq.

“Our forces received 600 people yesterday and offered them assistance,” a brigadier general with the Kurdish peshmerga forces told AFP.

“We heard from them that Daesh is holding hundreds of families hostage and has executed young men for escaping from the land of jihad (holy war) to the land of the infidels,” he said.

A police colonel also said that several people had been shot dead by Daesh fighters as they attempted to flee the area recently.

A local tribal leader urged Iraqi forces to step up operations aimed at retaking Hawijah and rescue trapped civilians. “We are facing the risk of a massacre and the government has to move quickly,” Sheikh Anwar Al-Assi told AFP.

After retaking much of the vast western province of Anbar in recent months, including the Daesh bastion of Fallujah in June, Iraqi forces are training their sights on remaining extremist strongholds in the north.

The ultimate target is Mosul, the country’s second city and the de facto Iraqi capital of the terror organization’s self-proclaimed caliphate.

Kurdish and federal forces have held positions around Hawijah for months, imposing a loose siege on the city but stopping short of launching a fully-fledged assault to retake it.

Assi estimated the number of people still living under Daesh rule in the Hawijah area at 100,000.
Posted by: badanov 2016-08-06
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=464055