"The ISIL executed 32 soldiers from the Iraqi army in Ghazlani camp in Mosul,” Mamouzini said.
"Those executed soldiers left the ranks of the Iraqi army after the ISIL occupied the city in June 2014," he further added.
“The ISIL also executed 15 of its war-disabled gunmen, who had lost their body organs in the battles with the Pishmarga and Iraqi forces,” Mamouzini said.
He further said that the ISIL in not able to take care of wounded members.
Earlier this month, The ISIL Takfiri terrorist group reportedly executed 112 of its own members in Iraq’s embattled Northern province of Nineveh.
Mamouzini said at the time that the ISIL terrorists killed their fellow extremists in the city, located some 400 kilometers (248 miles) North of the capital, Baghdad, on the grounds that they had plans to orchestrate a "coup" against the terrorist group’s leader, Ibrahim al-Samarrai aka Abu Bakr al-Baghdadi.
Mamouzini added that the militants, among them 18 top commanders, were executed by firing squad at a prison in Southern part of Mosul.
The slain terrorists had reportedly planned to kill the self-proclaimed Mosul governor, Abu Abdul Majid Afar, overrun Nineveh Province, break from the ISIL and declare war on the terrorists currently positioned in Syria’s Northern militant-held city of Raqqa.
The development came on the same day that ISIL extremists rounded up scores of Mosul residents and put them under control to make sure that their relatives, who are currently performing Hajj in neighboring Saudi Arabia, would return to Iraq.
Gruesome violence has plagued the Northern and Western parts of Iraq ever since ISIL Takfiri terrorists launched an offensive in June 2014, and took control of portions of Iraqi territory.
The militants have been committing vicious crimes against all ethnic and religious communities in Iraq, including Shiites, Sunnis, Kurds, Christians and others.
Units of army soldiers joined by volunteer fighters are seeking to win back militant-held regions in joint operations; Farsnews reported.