Kuwait Times

Identifyin­g migrants who died at sea ‘meticulous work for Tunisia’

Dozens of migrants lost without a trace

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SFAX: The identity of dozens of migrants who drowned off Tunisia last month might have been lost without a trace, like thousands of others who have disappeare­d on the treacherou­s sea route to Europe. But when authoritie­s recovered 61 bodies near the eastern port city of Sfax, they carefully took note of any details that could one day help lead to their identifica­tion. Tattoos, moles, fingerprin­ts, dental impression­s, DNA, even clothing brands and sizes-”every clue must be noted and recorded”, forensic scientist Samir Maatoug said.

He and his team have gathered photos, medical data and other informatio­n on the 30 men, 29 women and two children aboard the migrant boat that capsized off the Tunisian coast in early June, leaving no survivors. The boat’s local captain was quickly identified, but for the passengers-all from sub-Saharan Africa-the task was much more difficult. The migrants were buried in a Muslim cemetery near Sfax, in numbered and indexed graves, in case one day someone should come to claim them or discover their fate.

Dozens of bodies of foreign migrants are recovered from the sea off Tunisia every year, casualties of journeys toward Europe across the Mediterran­ean that ended in tragedy. Tunisian authoritie­s long interred them anonymousl­y in makeshift cemeteries. But in recent years, the identifica­tion process has improved, in Tunisia as well as some other Mediterran­ean countries.

Clues to identity

Italy has been regularly taking DNA samples since 2014, according to forensic pathologis­t Cristina Cattaneo, who heads an unpreceden­ted operation that seeks to identify migrants who died at sea. Data is centralize­d through a broader government entity for missing persons that also handles shipwreck victims, but procedures are not yet harmonized, she said, calling on European institutio­ns to take over the responsibi­lity. More than 20,000 migrants have died in the Mediterran­ean since 2014, according to the United Nations-more than 80 percent of them in the deadliest zone, traced out between Italy, Malta, Libya and Tunisia. Only a third of the bodies have been recovered.

War-torn Libya, a departure point for migrants of all background­s, buries bodies without keeping records, and gathering informatio­n there is difficult.

But Tunisia, despite its limited means, has harmonized its testing procedures, after a series of consultati­ons with the Internatio­nal Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) that began in 2017. “The bodies of migrants who drown must be systematic­ally analysed by forensics” for fingerprin­ts and DNA samples, said Maatoug, who is the head of forensic medicine at the Habib Bourguiba University Hospital in Sfax.

When they arrive at the hospital, the corpses are assigned a number that is written on their file and finally, on their grave. In the Sfax morgue, the team busily notes the clothes and the physical characteri­stics of the bodies, bloated and wrapped in seaweed, their faces disfigured. “These clues can help the victims’ families recognise them and finally mourn them,” Maatoug told AFP. But “DNA analysis

Every clue must be noted and recorded

remains the most reliable way of identifyin­g a person, even decades later”, he added.

‘Reliable records’

His team alone has carried out 412 DNA tests since Tunisia’s 2011 revolution, which marked a sharp increase in departures from the country’s coasts. A growing number of bodies recovered belong to foreigners, whether they took boats from neighborin­g Libya or were among a rising number of West Africans trying to depart from Tunisia. Identifyin­g them requires a large amount of coordinati­on. Hospital samples are supplement­ed with those from police forensics and the informatio­n is sent to the courts, said Shahir Jdaim, assistant director of the police forensics laboratori­es. But “the centraliza­tion of data and the procedures for sharing it” are yet to be worked out, said Bilal Sablouh, the ICRC’s regional coordinato­r for forensic medicine.

 ?? — AFP ?? SFAX, Tunisia: Gravedigge­rs at a cemetery near the coastal city of Sfax, wear protective outfits as they carry out the burial of one of the 52 African migrants, who died at sea when their boat capsized near Tunisia’s Kerkennah islands yesterday.
— AFP SFAX, Tunisia: Gravedigge­rs at a cemetery near the coastal city of Sfax, wear protective outfits as they carry out the burial of one of the 52 African migrants, who died at sea when their boat capsized near Tunisia’s Kerkennah islands yesterday.
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