Almost all Shiite paramilitaries had left Tikrit on Saturday after locals complained that some fighters had spent several days looting the Sunni city after helping retake it from the Islamic State group.
“Most of the [paramilitaries] were removed from the city,” said Ahmed al-Kraim, the head of the council of Tikrit and its province Saladin.
The rampage of theft and burning began on Wednesday, within hours of the Iraqi government declaring that security forces and Shiite paramilitaries had recaptured the city from the Islamic State after a month-long battle.
The extremists had held Tikrit since June last year.
Local officials said the mayhem left hundreds of homes and shops looted or torched. The violence had threatened to cast a pall over the government victory in the city, home of late Iraqi dictator Saddam Hussein.
Iraqi Prime Minister Haider al-Abadi, a Shiite, met officials from Saladin Governorate and took the decision that the paramilitaries had to leave Tikrit.
Al-Kraim called the talks with al-Abadi “very positive.”
The Sunni politician said that the looting and burning had stopped on Saturday after “the federal and local police, along with [counterterrorism] troops became responsible for Tikrit’s security.”
A spokesman for the Shiite paramilitary fighters, Karim al-Noori, confirmed that 80 percent of the Shiite volunteer fighters had left Tikrit.
“The situation now is calm,” a police major, speaking on condition of anonymity, said in Tikrit.
Some eyewitnesses and government officials also blamed local Sunnis for the looting.
Al-Abadi, a moderate Shiite, has insisted that he will not tolerate rights abuses by any group in the war against the Islamic State, which has massacred thousands of Iraqi Shiites and members of other groups.
Iraqi troops, working in tandem with Shiite militias, secured Tikrit on Wednesday, but as the government declared victories, paramilitary fighters started ransacking buildings, according to local officials and witnesses.
On Friday, al-Abadi had ordered security forces to arrest anyone breaking the law and then convened his meeting on Saturday with Saladin’s governor and key officials.
“It sent a clear message to everyone. Although it is very challenging, the prime minister is on the top of situation,” al-Abadi spokesman Rafid Jaboori said.
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