ISIL committed war crimes at Mosul prison, UN investigation finds

At least 1,000 predominantly Shia prisoners executed by ISIL at Iraq’s Badush Central Prison in June 2014, UNITAD says.

EDITOR'S NOTE: Graphic content / Human remains, reportedly of victims of the 2014 Badush prison massacre committed by the ISIL (ISIS) group, are pictured on June 13, 2021, after being unearthed from a mass grave in the northern Iraqi village of Badush, northwest of the city of Mosul [File: Zaid al-Obeidi/AFP]

The head of a United Nations team investigating ISIL’s (ISIS) atrocities in Iraq has said the armed group’s fighters committed crimes against humanity and war crimes at a prison in the northern city of Mosul, where at least 1,000 mostly Shia Muslim prisoners were systematically killed seven years ago.

Christian Ritscher told the UN Security Council on Thursday that evidence collected from mass graves containing the remains of victims of executions carried out at Badush Central Prison and from survivors shows detailed preparations of the attack by senior ISIL members followed by an assault on the morning of June 10, 2014.

“Prisoners captured were led to sites close to the prison, separated based on their religion and humiliated,” he said. “At least 1,000 predominantly Shia prisoners were then systematically killed.”

Ritscher said the investigators’ analysis of digital, documentary, survivors and forensic evidence, including ISIL documents, has identified a number of members from the group who were responsible for the crimes.

As a result of the investigations, he said the UN Investigative Team to Promote Accountability for Crimes Committed by the Islamic State in Iraq (UNITAD) has concluded that ISIL committed “crimes against humanity of murder, extermination, torture, enforced disappearances, persecution and other inhumane acts” at Badush prison as well as the “war crimes of willful killing, torture, inhumane treatment, and outrage upon personal dignity”.

ISIL crimes in Iraq

ISIL fighters seized Iraqi cities and declared a self-styled caliphate in a large swath of territory in Syria and Iraq in 2014. The group was formally declared defeated in Iraq in 2017 following a three-year bloody battle that left tens of thousands dead and cities in ruins, but its sleeper cells continue to launch attacks in different parts of Iraq. On Friday, at least three civilians and seven Iraqi Kurdish Peshmerga fighters were killed in an attack blamed on ISIL.

In May, Ritscher’s predecessor, Karim Khan, told the Security Council that investigators had found “clear and compelling evidence” that ISIL fighters committed genocide against the Yazidi minority in 2014. He also said the armed group successfully developed chemical weapons and used mustard gas.

Ritscher hailed the “landmark moment” earlier this week that saw the first-ever conviction of an ISIL member for the crime of genocide at the regional court in Frankfurt, Germany. Taha al-Jumailly, a 29-year-old Iraqi, was also convicted of crimes against humanity, war crimes and bodily harm resulting in death over the death of a five-year-old Yazidi girl he had bought as a slave with her mother and then chained up in the hot sun to die.

“We now have the chance, collectively, to make such prosecutions the norm, not a celebrated exception,” Ritscher said. “In cooperation with Iraqi authorities and those of the Kurdistan region, together with survivors and with the support of this council, we are building the evidence that can deliver meaningful justice for all those who suffered from ISIL crimes in Iraq.”

Use of chemical weapons

Ritscher also said evidence collected relating to the Badush prison attacks underlined the detailed planning by ISIL in carrying out their atrocities.

The group’s approach “is seen even more clearly in two other key lines of investigation that have accelerated in the last six months: the development and use of chemical and biological weapons by ISIL, and the financial mechanisms through which it sustained its campaign of violence,” he said.

The team’s evidence also “shows that ISIL clearly identified and then seized chemical production factories and other sources of precursor material, while also overtaking the University of Mosul campus as a hub for research and development,” Ritscher said.

The group’s programme became more sophisticated and investigators have identified more than 3,000 victims of ISIL chemical weapons attacks as well as its use of rocket artillery projectiles containing a mustard sulphur agent, he said.

In his next briefing to the Security Council, Ritscher said he will present the team’s findings on ISIL’s use of chemical weapons including the crimes it committed.

He also stressed the critical importance of bringing ISIL’s financiers and those who profit from the group’s crimes to justice.

Ritscher said investigators have uncovered the inner workings of the ISIL central treasury and a network of senior leaders who also acted “as trusted financiers, diverting wealth that ISIL gained through pillage, theft of property from targeted communities and the imposition of a systematic and exploitative taxation system imposed on those living under ISIL control”.

He said the team recently shared information with the Iraqi judiciary on the use of money service businesses by the group “as key facilitators of their financing,” and it looks forward to expanding this kind of cooperation.

Source: News Agencies

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