Syria’s Raqqa still finding the dead, 2 years after IS fall
The neighbors reported a foul smell coming from the
house next door. The house, which the Islamic State group had used as a school
for its “cubs,” had been untouched ever since the militants were chased out of
the Syrian city two years ago. Weeds grew around an abandoned car in its
courtyard.
Even before the first responders felt the soft
ground of the courtyard, they knew what was underneath: the latest mass grave
in Raqqa, the former capital of the Islamic State group’s self-declared
“caliphate.”
On the first day of digging, they pulled out two
bodies. Within a few days, that was up to nearly 20, including women and
children, who had been stacked up in holes in the courtyard garden.
The discovery, seen by Associated Press journalists
over the weekend, was the 16th mass grave found in Raqqa since IS militants
were driven out in the summer of 2017. Even as Raqqa’s people gradually
rebuild, the graves found in houses, parks, destroyed buildings are a grim
reminder of the horrors perpetrated by the militants and the massive violence
inflicted on the city to remove them.
During their rule, the extremists carried out mass
killings, public beheadings and other atrocities. Women and men accused of
adultery were stoned to death, while men believed to be gay were thrown from
the tops of buildings and then pelted with stones.
More death came in the years-long aerial and ground
campaign to liberate Raqqa, waged by Kurdish-led forces backed by airstrikes
from the U.S.-led coalition. The assault destroyed nearly 80% of Raqqa.
So far, 5,218 bodies have been exhumed from mass
graves or from under the ruins of destroyed buildings around Raqqa, said Yasser
Khamis, who leads the team of first responders. Of those, around 1,400 were IS
fighters, distinguishable by their clothes and including some foreigners, he
said. Of the remainder, 700 have been identified by their loved ones, mainly
because they were the ones who buried the bodies.
Khamis said limited resources have slowed the search
and made it difficult to determine the cause of death for most. But those
killed have died in airstrikes, land mine explosions, mass killings or they
were IS fighters or victims buried by the group. Some were recently exhumed
with handcuffs.
The dead found in the latest grave were likely
killed in the last days of the furious battles for Raqqa, buried in a rush
during the fighting. The house is located in Raqqa’s Bedouin District, scene of
one of the last IS stands against the siege.
The house was built in a traditional Arab style, with
a courtyard in the center surrounded by rooms. The outside walls were
pockmarked with bullet holes. IS had used it as a school during its rule, and
school notebooks and children desks were strewn around the rooms.
In the garden in the courtyard, diggers pulled a new
body from the ground Saturday as an AP team visited the site. It had a uniform
on it, sign of an IS fighter. Digging ended Monday, with a total of 19 bodies
found, including three women and two children.
Ibrahim al-Mayel, a digger, said many of the bodies
they had found had been piled roughly on top of each other in the ground.
Such house burials account for most of the city’s
mass graves as civilians buried their dead where they could, unable to go far
as fighting intensified. Other graves in the same district — two in homes, two
in gardens — have yielded 90 bodies.
First responders look at human remains discovered at
the site of a mass grave in the Syrian city of Raqqa. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
At least two mass graves have been found in open
areas in the city — a public park and a training compound— or on the city’s
edges, where fighters buried their own or people they killed. The grave in the
park held at least 1,400 bodies, according to Khamis. His teams are still
digging up bodies in a mass grave outside the city, where they found more than
700 so far.
“I expect that this Arab house is the last location
within the city. We will then focus on the countryside,” Khamis said of the
latest discovery.
Raqqa was the seat of the militant’s self-proclaimed
caliphate, which at its height in 2014 stretched across a third of both Syria
and Iraq. This year, the last village held by the group was retaken, in eastern
Syria, though the militants are still present along the border and stage
attacks.
In Syria’s 8-year-old civil war, more than 100,000
people have been detained, abducted or gone missing, according to the U.N, most
of them disappeared by the government. Tens of thousands have likely vanished
into mass graves, many of them victims of IS. Khamis said his team has recorded
2,000 people missing from Raqqa, based on family reports. But he said the
number doesn’t reflect the full reality, since many families gave up on their
missing, couldn’t reach Khamis’ team or moved to other areas.
First responders say they have pulled nearly 20
bodies out of the latest mass grave uncovered in the Syrian city of Raqqa, once
the de facto capital of the Islamic State group. (AP Photo/Maya Alleruzzo)
His team only began collecting samples from bodies
three months ago, hoping that new training and DNA technology would be
available to help identify them. That means only 1,600 bodies of the 5,200
found had samples taken from them before reburial. “We need a lot more,” he
said.
In his offices in Raqqa, plastic bags carrying bone,
teeth or hair samples were labelled and identified by location and number.
International human rights groups say they are concerned local forensic groups
are not getting the support, expertise and resources they need. Identifying the
missing and preserving evidence for possible prosecutions is critical for
Syria’s future, they say.
“The worst thing I saw in my life at these graves is
a man who comes looking for his child and can’t find him,” said Hwaidi
Munawakh, one of the gravediggers.
He has worked on nine of Raqqa’s mass graves. From
one of them, he pulled out one of his cousins, a woman killed in an airstrike
during the final battle for the city.