Iraq exhumed 470 bodies from Tikrit mass graves: Minister

Iraq exhumed 470 bodies from Tikrit mass graves: Minister

BAGHDAD - Agence France-Presse

Iraqis mourn near body-bags containing the remains of people believed to have been slain by jihadists of ISIL lying on the ground at the Speicher camp in the Iraqi city of Tikrit, on April 12, 2015. ISIL executed hundreds of mostly Shiite recruits last June in what is known as the Speicher massacre, named for the military base near which they were captured. AFP Photo

Iraq has exhumed the remains of 470 people believed to have been executed by jihadists near Tikrit last year in what is known as the Speicher massacre, the health minister said May 28.

"We have exhumed the bodies of 470 Speicher martyrs from burial sites in Tikrit," Adila Hammoud said at a press conference in Baghdad.
 
In June 2014, armed men belonging or allied to the Islamic State group abducted hundreds of young, mostly Shiite recruits from Speicher military base, just outside the city of Tikrit.
 
They were then lined up in several locations and executed one by one, as shown in pictures and footage later released by the Islamic State of Iraq and the Levant (ISIL). 
 
Some were pushed into the Tigris river, others hastily buried in locations that were discovered when government and allied forces retook Tikrit from the jihadists about two months ago.
 
The highest estimate for the number of people killed in one of the worst atrocities committed by ISIL stands at 1,700.
 
"These bodies come from four burial sites... One of them was bigger than the others and contained 400," said Ziad Ali Abbas, the chief doctor at Baghdad's main morgue.
 
He said forensic examination of the exhumed remains was conducted with foreign assistance, including from the International Committee of the Red Cross.
         
Hundreds of families whose sons, fathers and brothers went missing at the time of the ISIL-led offensive in Iraq have been waiting for confirmation that their loved ones were among the Speicher victims.
 
Officials at May 28 press conference said the first list of names would be released next week, after weeks of DNA testing.
 
Identification documents the victims were carrying at the time of their capture were also found near burial sites.
 
Officials had said in mid-April that up to 10 different suspected burial sites were identified in the Tikrit area as a result of its recapture by government forces in late March and the first days of April.
 
Combined with a call by the country's top Shiite cleric Grand Ayatollah Ali al-Sistani for Iraqis to take up arms against them, the Speicher massacre played a key role in the mass recruitment of Shiite volunteers to fight the jihadists.
 
One of the spots where the Speicher cadets were executed is a police building in the sprawling Tikrit palace complex former president Saddam Hussein built in his hometown.
 
The quay where the victims were shot in the head and pushed into the Tigris has, since Tikrit was retaken, been turned into an improvised shrine.
 
Relatives, many of whom will never have a body to bury, have streamed to the site over the past two months along with fighters, delegations of officials, students and others.