Hitman black as Iraqi soldiers give popped at least 24 members of a Sunni reserves fought to al-Qaida in a small town southern of Baghdad.
Five adult females were among those downed after lives swept from their places last nighttime, checking to Iraqi army officials.
The victims were bound with cuffs and sprayed with machine-gun attack. Some of the torsos were "beyond recognition", reported to a senior Iraqi regular army official who wished to remain anonymous.
At least seven masses were establish alive, identical Baghdad's security department spokesman, Major Popular Qassim al-Moussawi. He read the putting to deaths bore "an obvious al-Qaida hallmark".
Many of those downed were extremities of localized Sunni reserves that grown against al-Qaida and its allies two years ago in what was a pregnant turning point in the campaign to reduce the Iraqi insurgency.
Moussawi same 24 people were confirmed dead, although an interior ministry official put the toll at between 20 and 25 men and five women.
Mustafa Kamel, a localised militia leader, same the attack passed late last nighttime in a small town in the Arab Jabour region, about 15 miles (25km) southwest of Baghdad.
There are hot 100,000 extremities of the Sunni militias, known as Awakening Councils and the Sons of Iraq. The US last year handed over control of the Rousing Councils to the Iraqi authorities, which pays their members some US$300 a month.
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