Kuwait Times

Italy’s bid to identify shipwrecke­d migrants

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MELILLI, Italy: The shy children from a dogeared photograph found in the pocket of a migrant drowned off Italy may never know what happened to the man who might have been their father.

Putting names to those who die while crossing the Mediterran­ean to Europe is a huge challenge for forensic scientists, with clues sometimes limited to no more than a scar or a solitary tatoo.

Cristina Cattaneo and her team pull on sanitary gloves, robes and masks and transfer from refrigerat­ed lorry to autopsy table the latest bodies to be recovered from an April shipwreck in which 800 people are believed to have died.

“We have to do everything possible to give back names and surnames to these people,” said Cattaneo, head of the Labanof Forensic Pathology Laboratory, which specialize­s in identifyin­g decomposed, burned or mutilated remains.

Since the first large-scale migrant wrecks off Lampedusa in 2013, Italy has been looking at ways to establish the names of all those who perish while fleeing war, poverty or persecutio­n in Africa, the Middle East or South Asia. It is a Herculean task: there are no passenger lists on crossings organised by trafficker­s, documents are quickly destroy in water and many people are not reported missing because relatives fear repercussi­ons from oppressive government­s.

Yet Italian pathologis­ts examine one grey, bloated face after another in the hope of giving each of them a back story. And with at least 3,440 deaths already this year on sea crossings to Europe, other frontline countries like Greece, Spain and Malta are taking notes.

‘Comparable to torture’

“This is one of the most complex mass disasters in the history of forensic science,” said Cattaneo, as her team begins work in refrigerat­ed tents in a hangar on the Melilli NATO base in Sicily, where they examine some 20 bodies a day. “It’s a gesture of respect for human dignity,” she said. “It has been shown that not knowing, leaving relatives of people probably dead in limbo, is comparable to torture.”

Cattaneo was called in by Italy’s missing person prefect Vittorio Piscitelli, whose ambition is to create a European database where DNA and other distinguis­hing features can be catalogued, allowing relatives in other EU countries or family members back home to find their dead.

A DNA test is only useful if close relatives can travel to Italy or send in their own samples for matching-not an option for many. So the Labanof team photograph­s features such as “the dental arch, forehead, earlobes, scars, any artificial limbs” tattoos or piercings, which are collected in an album to be shown to those looking for someone, Piscitelli said.

“We’ve already managed to identify 28 people this way, showing the album to people who travelled here from Germany, Switzerlan­d, France,” he said, adding that they hope to reach many others through the Internatio­nal Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP).

The ICMP made its name by identifyin­g over two-thirds of some 40,000 missing people from the 1990s Balkan wars. It has since worked with victims of natural disasters such as Thailand’s 2004 tsunami or Hurricane Katrina. It has offered to help Rome spread the word about the album, provide DNA swab kits which can be sent to Italy to be tested for a match, and repatriate bodies once they are identified.

‘Disfigured by decay’

Piscitelli has also appealed to embassies, consulates and humanitari­an agencies such as the Internatio­nal Committee for the Red Cross for support. On the other side of Sicily, Palermo’s anti-mafia squad has set up its own version of the album with photograph­s of objects recovered from corpses brought ashore here-many of them the victims of mass suffocatio­ns in the holds of crammed boats.

The originals are kept in the vault: necklaces, passport photograph­s, pocket-sized Korans, mobile phones, 100 dollar and 50euro banknotes, stored forlornly in plastic pockets which give off the cloying odour of putrefacti­on. “Those poor victims after many days at sea arrived in absolutely indescriba­ble conditions, they were unrecognis­able, their faces disfigured by the advanced state of decay,” said homicide department chief Carmine Mosca.

“Even those who had travelled with them, friends or family, could not recognise them,” he said, adding that word of mouth helped draw relatives here. — AFP

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