San Francisco Chronicle

U.N.: 200 mass graves were left by Islamic State

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BAGHDAD — More than 200 mass graves containing between 6,000 and 12,000 bodies have been found in Iraq from the time of the Islamic State group’s three-year reign, U.N. investigat­ors said Tuesday.

The 202 graves verified by investigat­ors dot northern Iraq and are a “legacy of ISIL’s terror,” according to a joint report by the U.N. mission to Iraq and the U.N. office for human rights. Findings from the grave sites can be used as evidence of the group’s crimes, they said.

The graves date from 2014 to 2017 when the militant group, sometimes known by the acronym ISIL, ruled some of Iraq’s largest cities and towns.

As the militants swept through Iraq and neighborin­g Syria, they killed captured members of the security forces en masse, expelled or killed minorities, and enslaved women from the Yazidi sect. The United Nations says the widespread violaonce tions could amount to genocide.

Several graves found in Iraq’s Salahuddin province contain the remains of victims of the 2014 Camp Speicher massacre, when the militants killed around 1,700 Iraqi security forces and army cadets.

In some cases, the militants dropped their victims or the bodies of their victims in wells or sinkholes instead of digging graves. Investigat­ors said there could be thousands of bodies in the Khasfa sinkhole south of Mosul, the largest city under Islamic State control.

Iraqi authoritie­s have exhumed the remains of 1,258 victims from 28 graves, according to the United Nations. It urged authoritie­s to identify the remains of all gravesite victims and seek justice for families.

Iraq declared victory over Islamic State in December last year, but the militants still control pockets of territory just across the border in Syria, and continue to claim responsibi­lity for abductions and bomb blasts around the country.

 ?? Safin Hamed / AFP / Getty Images 2015 ?? A man inspects the remains of a Yazidi victim in 2015 killed by Islamic State fighters in Sinjar, Iraq.
Safin Hamed / AFP / Getty Images 2015 A man inspects the remains of a Yazidi victim in 2015 killed by Islamic State fighters in Sinjar, Iraq.

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