The Hashed al-Jabour militia, made up of Sunni tribal fighters, killed four men it had captured in a village north of Mosul in November, according to a report published by the New York-based group.
The report cited witnesses who said the men were shot in the presence of Iraqi security forces without any judicial proceedings.
The militia is part of the Popular Mobilization Forces, a group of mostly Shiite militias sanctioned by the government which have been accused of abuses during past campaigns against IS, a Sunni extremist group.
"Generally speaking, retaliations could happen in some areas by the locals (in the PMF) who had family members and relatives killed by Daesh before the entering of government security forces," al-Hadithi said, using the Arabic acronym for IS.
"Such acts are totally rejected by the Iraqi government and are fully investigated, and those behind it face trials."
In comments broadcast on state television yesterday, Iraq's Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi said he had not received any "complaints" about the Popular Mobilization Forces. He said the Mosul fight was "clean," and moving forward at a "good pace."
"This was a very difficult fight," Lt. Gen. Abdul-Ghani al-Asadi of the special forces said in Mosul's al-Barid neighborhood today. As Iraqi troops have pushed into denser neighborhoods, their advance has been slowed by heavy resistance.
The International Organization for Migration said today that at least 103,872 people have fled their homes since the operation began. The city was still home to more than a million people when the offensive began two months ago.
The group has also accused the Shiite militias operating under the PMF of abuses against civilians in majority Sunni towns and cities. The prime minister's office has investigated individual militiamen after past allegations.
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