Massacre of almost one
thousand seven hundred troops by IS forces in Tikrit last last year June has made
a survivor opened up his escape as forensic teams begin to exhume the graves.
Iraqi soldier Ali explained
how IS lulled him and fellow troops into believing they would be well treated.
"They told us they had
no problem with us and promised us we would be sent to our families, they
brought us cars and even gave us water to make us feel secure," he said.
"Once they put us in
large cars, they managed to control us and brought us here and tied us up, and
I still have a mark from my cuffs here."
He went on: "The
fourth bullet was meant to kill me, but I was not hit.
"The fifth bullet was
fired, killing the one who was next to me. Playing dead, I fell to the ground.
I was covered by the blood of my colleagues and I rolled down into the
valley."
Up to 12 suspected mass
graves are now being exhumed.
"We dug up the first
mass grave site today," said an Iraqi health official working with a
forensic team sent in to Tikrit, outside the former US base camp of Camp
Speicher.
"Until now we found at
least 20 bodies. Initial indications show indisputably that they were from the
Speicher victims.
"It was a heart-breaking
scene. We couldn't prevent ourselves from breaking down in tears. What savage
barbarian could kill 1,700 persons in cold blood?" he asked.
The mass killing of the
Shi'ite troops took place as the fighters fought their way across northern
Iraq.
Their deaths came to
symbolise early on the brutality of IS, as well as the group's hatred of the
country's Shi'ite majority.
The jihadists at the time
posted online images of hundreds of the soldiers being machine-gunned in what
may turn out to be the deadliest single act of killing during a decade of
sectarian violence in Iraq.
The soldiers' bodies were
then buried in the presidential compound of the late dictator Saddam Hussein,
who came from Tikrit.
The exhumation of their
bodies comes days after Iraqi forces and Shi'te paramilitaries drove IS
fighters out of the city.
Victims' families and
friends have been lobbying for months for answers to what happened to their
loved ones.

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