Muscat Daily

Iraq exhumes Saddam-era victims from mass grave

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Najaf, Iraq - Iraqi authoritie­s have exhumed the remains of 15 people from a mass grave believed to hold dozens more likely killed under dictator Saddam Hussein, an official said on Saturday.

The mass grave was first discovered in April near the southern city of Najaf, during work to build a residentia­l compound.

It is believed to date back to the 1990s, when Saddam unleashed a deadly campaign against members of the majority Shiite Muslim community in southern Iraq that left nearly 100,000 dead.

“There could be 100 victims in this grave. It is an estimation, the number could be higher due to the large size of the area,” said Abdul Ilah al-Naeli, who heads a government foundation tasked with finding mass graves and identifyin­g the remains.

Calling the burial ‘the scene of the crime’, Naeli said the mass grave dates back to the ‘1991 popular (Shiite) uprising’ against Saddam. An AFP correspond­ent saw skulls and other human remains near the constructi­on site where cement buildings have been erected.

According to Iraqi authoritie­s,

Saddam’s regime forcibly disappeare­d more than one million people - including from the Kurdish minority - in the 1980s and 1990s, and many of their families are still trying to ascertain what happened to them.

Iraq pays tribute to the missing on May 16, which is known in the war-wracked country as the National Day of Mass Graves.

Saddam was toppled in the US-led invasion of Iraq in 2003 and executed in December 2006 after being convicted by an Iraqi court of crimes against humanity.

The oil-rich country has been hit by waves of conflict in subsequent decades, culminatin­g in the fight against the Islamic State militant group, which ended in 2017.

 ?? (AfP) ?? Forensic experts working for the Iraqi authoritie­s in a mass grave near city of Najaf, on Saturday
(AfP) Forensic experts working for the Iraqi authoritie­s in a mass grave near city of Najaf, on Saturday

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