The Manila Times

Help urged for Syrians excavating mass graves

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BEIRUT: Human Rights Watch (HRW) yesterday urged the internatio­nal community to support Syrians excavating mass graves

ousted jihadists from the city.

Fighters backed by US-led coalition air strikes expelled the Islamic State jihadist group from the city in October, leaving the Raqa City Council to run it.

The New York-based group said council workers with little specialize­d equipment or experience in forensic analysis were struggling to tackle the mammoth mission of exhuming the dead.

“Raqa city has at least nine mass graves, each one estimated to have dozens, if not hundreds, of bodies, making exhumation­s a monumental task,” said HRW’s Priyanka Motaparthy.

“Without the right technical assistance, these exhumation­s may not provide families with the answers they have been waiting for and could damage or destroy evidence crucial to future justice efforts.”

IS jihadists carried out public executions and detained thousands of people during their rule of the city from June 2014 to October 2017.

But local authoritie­s estimate thousands of people were also killed in the battle to retake the city, either buried quickly or left under the rubble.

HRW urged the internatio­nal community, including the United States, and internatio­nal organizati­ons to support local authoritie­s in their task.

“Internatio­nal organizati­ons with forensic expertise should provide technical support, including by sending in forensic experts,” it said.

Authoritie­s should set up a civilian authority to liaise with the families of the missing, and create a digital database including photograph­s of those exhumed, HRW said.

“Identifyin­g missing people and preserving evidence for possible prosecutio­ns will have implicatio­ns for justice in Syria as a whole,” the rights group said.

Last month, the Syrian team

in a football pitch near the central hospital, it said.

city’s

The team—made up mostly of volunteers—then reburied them after logging informatio­n such as hair colour, clothes and shoes, as well as any identifyin­g marks on their bodies.

They said they believed they found the remains of air strike

their clothes and perhaps patients of the nearby hospital, HRW said.

But, it said, “the team needs far more training and technical assistance in order to exhume the bodies and collect data without losing informatio­n crucial to identifyin­g them”.

In April, an AFP correspond­ent visited the site of the mass grass in the football pitch and saw a young man step over blue body bags searching for his brother.

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