
Dead bodies of dozens of women and children slaughtered by ISIS fighters have been unearthed at two mass graves in an Iraq football stadium. The chilling discovery was made by Iraqi cops who were led to the graves by captured Islamic State militants.
They
found at least 40 bodies, among them women and children and men in
civilian clothes, at the 40,000 capacity Al Ramadi Stadium in the
western city of Ramadi.
Officials believe Islamic State militants
used the stadium as a mass graveyard to dump their slaughtered victims
during their reign of terror in the city.
The Iraq-US coalition
suffered a major blow last May after Ramadi, the provincial capital of
Anbar, was captured by Islamic State.
But following the city's
liberation last December, the barbarism of Sunni terrorist group's
brutal regime is only just coming to light.

In December, the U.N. human rights office in Iraq said it received
reports of 16 mass graves discovered near the town of Sinjar after it
was liberated from the Islamic State group the previous month.
Among
the first mass graves uncovered in Sinjar — within days of Islamic
State forces being pushed out of the town — was one near the town’s
centre.
It was estimated to contain the bodies of 78 elderly women.
Another, about 10 miles outside of Sinjar, contained between 50 and 60 bodies of men, women and children.
The term "mass grave" is used by the U.N. to refer to a location where three or more murdered civilian victims are buried.

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