Reuters - A Shi'ite
paramilitary force said late on Tuesday it will support the Iraqi army's
offensive on Mosul, Islamic State's last major stronghold in Iraq, raising the
risk
of sectarian strife in the mainly Sunni region.
The Popular
Mobilization Force (PMF), a coalition of mostly Iranian-trained militias, said
it will back government forces advancing toward Tal Afar, about 55 kilometers
(34 miles) west of Mosul.
Tal Afar's
population was a mix of Sunni and Shi'ite ethnic Turkmens until Shi'ites fled
the town after Islamic State's ultra-hardline Sunni militants took over the
region in 2014, declaring a ''caliphate'' over parts of Iraq and neighboring
Syria.
The PMF also said
it will be supporting the armed forces advancing into the city of Mosul from
the west.
"The PMF
will be backing the security forces on the western front (..) along two axis,
the first is Tal Afar and the second is to support the forces going into the
center of Mosul," a statement on the paramilitary force's website said.
The
announcement came despite warnings from human rights groups that PMF
involvement could ignite sectarian violence.
Shi'ites make
up a majority in Iraq but Sunnis are predominant in the north and the west.
The PMF
officially reports to the Shi'ite-led government of Prime Minister Haider
al-Abadi, who announced on Monday the start of the offensive on Mosul, Iraq's
second-largest city.
Abadi had
sought to allay fears of sectarian bloodshed, saying that the army and the
police will be the only forces allowed to enter the city.
The PMF was
formed in 2014 to help push back Islamic State's sweeping advance through the
northern and western provinces.
Amnesty
International on Tuesday published a report saying Shi'ite militias had
committed ``serious human rights violations, including war crimes'' against
civilians fleeing Islamic State-held territory.
The U.N in
July said it had a list of more than 640 Sunni Muslim men and boys reportedly
abducted by a Shi’ite militia in Falluja, a former militant stronghold west of
Baghdad, and about 50 others who were summarily executed or tortured to death.
The government
and the PMF say a limited number of violations had occurred and were
investigated, but they deny abuses were widespread and systematic.
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