Air strike kills 55 civilians in western Iraq
Iraq's speaker of parliament demanded a probe into the incident that left 12 women and 19 children dead
Nearly 2,000 soldiers and hundreds of civilians were killed in Iraq in November (AFP)
Air strikes killed dozens of people, including many women and children, in an Islamic State-held town near Iraq's western border with Syria on Wednesday, two parliamentarians and local hospital sources said.
They said the air strikes hit a busy market in the town of Qaim, in Iraq's Anbar province, describing the incident as a massacre. The hospital sources said 55 civilians were killed, including 12 women and 19 children, in three air strikes.
The bodies of eight militants were delivered to Qaim hospital morgue, the hospital sources said.
A spokesperson for the provincial council of Anbar claimed the strike was carried out by an Iraqi aircraft in the afternoon and demanded a government probe.
"The strike hit a market at peak hour, there were retirees queueing up pick up their pension, people collecting salaries and social security payments," Eid Ammash said.
"Entire families were killed," Ammash said.
Maath al-Jughaifi, a tribal leader in Haditha, the nearest city, said "between 70 people and 80 people were killed" in Al-Qaim, but claimed the strike was carried out by the US-led coalition that has carried out thousands of strikes against IS.
There was no immediate comment from Iraq's Joint Operations Command supervising the fight against IS or from the US-led coalition.
Iraq's speaker of parliament Salim al-Juburi condemned the air strike by saying in a statement that the attack "targeted a market area for civilians and resulted in the death and injury of dozens of them".
He said he "holds the government responsible for such mistakes" and demanded the immediate launch of an investigation into the alleged strike.
If confirmed, the blunder would be one of the worst cases of civilians being killed in strikes in Iraq since the start of the air campaign against the Islamic State (IS) group in 2014.
Officials in Anbar, the western province in which Al-Qaim is located, said dozens were killed in the afternoon strike, although AFP could not reach sources in the town to confirm the casualty toll.
Amaq, an IS-affiliated propaganda website, released a video purporting to show the aftermath of the strike and claimed 120 people were killed.
AFP could not authenticate the footage, which showed devastation in a market area and a large number of dead and wounded strewn across the street or being treated.
Al-Qaim lies a few kilometres from the border with Syria, around 320 kilometres (200 miles) west of the capital Baghdad, and is the last major town in Anbar still under IS control.
Nearly 2,000 soldiers and hundreds of civilians were killed in Iraq in November, the UN said on 2 December, in a "staggering" spike in deaths coinciding with operations to retake the Islamic State-held city of Mosul.
The figure increased threefold from October, when tens of thousands of troops launched an assault to retake the Islamic State group's last major Iraqi bastion of Mosul.
According to the UN mission in Iraq's monthly tally, 1,959 Iraqi forces were killed last month and at least 450 others wounded.
That figure is just under half the number of American soldiers killed after the US invaded the country in 2003.
The toll includes members of the army, police who are engaged in combat, the Kurdish peshmerga, interior ministry forces and pro-government paramilitaries.
The UN statement also said at least 926 civilians were killed, bringing to 2,885 the number of Iraqis killed in acts of terrorism, violence and armed conflict last month.
"The casualty figures are staggering, with civilians accounting for a significant number of the victims," said the top UN envoy in Iraq, Jan Kubis.
