The Kurdistan Democratic Party (KDP) spokesman in Mosul, Saeed Mamouzini, told Arabic-language al-Sumaria satellite television network that Daesh extremists killed 15 women in Ghazlani military base, which lies near the city,on Saturday after the victims refused to marry the militants.
Mamouzini added that Daesh members have murdered more than 30 Iraqi women over the past two months after they turned down proposals to marry the terrorists.
Late last month, Daesh militants executed 19 women in Mosul on the same ground.
Hana Nawafili, a spokeswoman for the Iraqi Observatory for the Defense of Battered Women, told Arabic-language al-Maalomah news agency on July 18 that Daesh terrorists had gang-raped seven female residents of Fallujah, situated about 69 kilometers west of Baghdad, and then murdered them.
Iraqi Ministry of Human Rights reported on December 16, 2014, that Daesh terrorists had executed at least 150 women, including pregnant ones, in the country’s western province of al-Anbar, after they declined to marry the Takfiris.
The ministry further noted that the militants buried the women in mass graves in Fallujah.
Gruesome violence has plagued the northern and western parts of Iraq ever since Daesh Takfiris launched an offensive in June 2014, and took control of swathes of Iraqi territory.
The militants have been committing heinous crimes against all ethnic and religious groups in Iraq, including Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, Christians, Yazidi Kurds and others.
Units of army soldiers and volunteer fighters are seeking to push back militant-held regions in joint operations.