Blindfolded and bound, his knees pressing into the dirt, Imad resigned himself to what seemed inevitable. He was going to die.
Islamic State gunmen had driven him and about 90 other former Iraqi police and army officers to a remote industrial area on the edge of Hamam al-Alil, 16km south of Mosul, after rounding them up from their villages last month.
Iraqi security forces were approaching, and the militants were losing their grip on the area.
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Packed into two pickup trucks and a bus, the men were told they were being taken to see their families, but they were instead slated for execution.
Imad’s truck was the first to be unloaded, and he was the first in line. A militant took him by the arm.
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He walked around 10 metres.
An Iraqi Federal Police officer examines human remains at a site of a mass grave of victims of Islamic State militants in Hamam al-Alil, south of Mosul. Photo: AP