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Iraq urged to reveal whereabouts of 643 men and boys disappeared in 2016
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Amnesty International on Thursday urged government to reveal the whereabouts of 643 Iraqi men and boys who were forcibly disappeared by Ìý(PMF) militias in Fallujah.
The rights watchdog made the appealÌýas the families of the disappeared persons markÌýthe fifth anniversary of their abduction.
"For five years, the families of these men and boys have been living in anguish, not knowing the fate of their loved ones, or whether they are even alive," said Lynn Maalouf, 'sÌýDeputy Director for the Middle East and North Africa.
"The Iraqi authorities must end this anguish and reveal the fate and whereabouts of those forcibly disappeared by the [PMF]. We also urge the authorities to publicly disclose the findings of their official investigation and hold those responsible to account to the full extent of the law," Maalouf urged.
The forced disappearances took place on 3 June 2016, when thousands of men, womenÌýand children fleeing the Saqlawiya area of Anbar provinceÌýencountered a large group of armed men.
Survivors later identified them as members of the PMF by their flags and uniforms.
TheÌýPMF, known in Arabic as the Hashd Al-Shaabi, were fighting alongside Iraq's government to retake the city of Fallujah from the Islamic State group.
The fighters reportedly separated around 1,300 men and boys deemed to be of fighting age from their families. Some 643 were later boarded onto buses and a large truck. The rest of the men were taken to a location known as the "yellow house", where survivors say they were tortured and abused.
Days after the incident, the office of then-Iraqi Prime Minister Haider Al-Abadi formed a committee to investigate abuses and forced disappearances committed during the operations to retake Fallujah. The committee's findings have never been made public.
The PMF, also known as the PMU, isÌýa grouping of mostly Shia militias backed by Iran. The paramilitary forceÌýhas been accused of severe rights abuses by rights groups and considered by the US to be a key threat to stability in the region.
The government of Prime Minister Mustafa Al-Kadhimi has sided with the US against the groups, however,Ìýit has struggled to bring themÌýunder control.
Last year, IraqiÌýforces raided an Iran-backed militia's strongholdÌýin Baghdad and arrested more than a dozen members of the group. The arrested men were let goÌýafterÌýunidentified gunmen drove to government buildings in Baghdad's Green Zone to demand their release.
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