0 Shares 0



0

0







After burning people to death, the Takfiri terrorist group ISIS executed 45 of its members by freezing them to death.

Sources said that the 45 members were put alive in morgue freezers in Mosul and were left for 24 hours where they were left to die slowly. This is not the first time that an act of terror has been carried out by terrorists against their fellow-fighters.

In the details, sources reported that “ISIS executed 45 of its members who had fled the confrontations that wre taking place with Iraqi forces in Heet district by putting them in morgue fridges for 24 hours, to later take out the frozen bodies and put it at the entrances of the city.”

In February 2015, ISIS burned 45 Iraqis to death in al-Baghdadi, a town in western Iraq. During the same period of time, ISIS also broadcast a horrific video of a Jordanian pilot being burned to death on giant public screens to crowds that included young children.

The footage that spread quickly across news media appeared purporting to show a crowd cheering and chanting as the murder was projected onto an outdoor screen in Raqqa.

Iraqi officials, meanwhile, have told the United Nations Security Council that ISIS had committed genocide against Iraqi citizens, according to Reuters. "These terrorist groups have desecrated all human values. They have committed the most heinous criminal terrorist acts against the Iraqi people whether Shi'ite, Sunni, Christians, Turkmen, Shabak or Yazidis," said United Nations Ambassador Mohamed Ali Al-hakim.

Also in 2015, ISIS released a video purporting the death of al-Kasasbeh, in which he can be seen being burned alive inside a metal cage, Al Bawaba reported.

Jordan has confirmed pilot Lt. Muath al-Kaseasbeh, who was captured by the ISIS extremist group in December, was burned to death, The Associated Press reports.

Jordanian state television confirmed Jordanian pilot Mu'ath al-Kasasbeh has been burned to death by ISIS.

In another form of violence, Islamic State militants are selling abducted Iraqi children at markets as sex slaves, and killing other youth, including by crucifixion or burying them alive, a United Nations watchdog said on Wednesday.

Iraqi boys aged under 18 are increasingly being used by the militant group as suicide bombers, bomb makers, informants or human shields to protect facilities against U.S.-led air strikes, the U.N. Committee on the Rights of the Child said.

On a related note marking the crimes of the terrorist group, Human Rights Watch reported in April 2015 that ISIS terrorists have conducted systematic sexual crimes against Izadi women and girls in northern Iraq.

The international rights body made the announcement after interviewing 11 Izadi women and nine girls, who escaped from the Takfiri group's captivity, in the northern town of Dohuk, in Iraq’s Kurdistan region, in January and February 2015.

In August, 2014, the ISIS Takfiri groups took several thousand Izadi civilians into custody in the northern Iraqi province of Nineveh, separated the girls and women from their families, and transferred them to different strongholds of the terrorist group in Iraq and neighboring Syria.