1,400 Iraqis killed in January violence

block
Al-Jazeera.com :
In one of Iraq’s deadliest months in years, 1,375 people were killed and 2,240 were wounded in acts of “terrorism or violence” in January, the United Nations reported.
In monthly statistics released on Sunday, the UN Assistance Mission for Iraq (UNAMI) said civilians represented more than half of the casualties, with 790 killed and 1,469 wounded.
The dead also included 585 members of the Iraqi army which is struggling to rebuild itself after fighters from the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL) group seized large parts of the country last year.
January’s total casualty figure of 3,615 was higher than in any month in 2014 – which the UNAMI says was the deadliest year since 2008.
UNAMI said Baghdad was the worst affected province in January with 1,014 civilian casualties (256 killed, 758 injured), while Anbar suffered a total of 779 civilian casualties (195 killed and 584 injured).
Diyala province was the next worst affected with a total of 114 killed and 49 injured. The deaths appear to include more than 70 unarmed civilians who were reportedly killed in the village of Barwanah last week as they fled from ISIL fighters.
Sunni politicians and tribal chiefs have accused Shia fighters of being responsible for the killings.
Iraq’s Prime Minister Haider al-Abbadi hosted a security summit in the capital on Saturday with political and religious leaders, in a bid to unite the country’s factions against ISIL. At the talks, Abbadi made an apparent reference to the alleged massacre in Diyala province.
“I have said it before and will say it today – those who were conducting killings and  
kidnapping crimes in Baghdad and other cities are no less dangerous than terrorists,” he said.
Meanwhile, the UNAMI recorded 100 killed and 52 injured Salahuddin province in January, Ninewa recorded 85 killed and 12 injured and Kirkuk recorded 14 killed and six injured.
The UN says its numbers “have to be considered as the absolute minimum” because they do not include territories held by ISIL or those who lost their lives due to “secondary effects of violence … [including] exposure to the elements, lack of water, food, medicines and healthcare”.
block