Iraqi teams exhume mass graves of soldiers killed by ISIL in Tikrit

ISIL militants overran Saddam Hussein’s hometown last June, capturing around 1,700 soldiers as they were trying to leave Camp Speicher, an air base on the outskirts of Tikrit previously used by US troops.

Members from the Iraqi forensic team search exhume the bodies of soldiers killed by ISIL from a mass grave in the presidential compound of the former president Saddam Hussein in Tikrit on April 6, 2015. About 1,700 Shiite soldiers from Camp Speicher were murdered by ISIL in June when the militant group overran Tikrit. Reuters
Powered by automated translation

BAGHDAD // Forensic teams in the newly liberated city of Tikrit have started exhuming bodies from mass graves believed to contain some of the hundreds of soldiers killed by ISIL militants last year.

Kamil Amin, an official at Iraq’s human rights ministry, said work started on Monday on eight locations inside Tikrit’s complex of presidential palaces, where much of the killing is believed to have taken place.

At least 47 bodies were exhumed by Tuesday, Mr Amin said, adding that the number is expected to rise.

Lab tests will be carried out to match them with DNA samples that have already been taken from families of around 85 per cent of the victims.

ISIL militants overran Saddam Hussein’s hometown last June, capturing around 1,700 soldiers as they were trying to leave Camp Speicher, an air base on the outskirts of Tikrit previously used by US troops.

The fall of Tikrit was part of the ISIL onslaught that stunned Iraqi security forces and the military, which melted away as the militants advanced and captured key cities and towns in the country’s north and west.

Later, the ISIL group posted graphic images online that showed its gunmen massacring scores of the soldiers after loading the captives onto flatbed trucks and then forcing them to lay face-down in a shallow ditch, their arms tied behind their backs.

Other videos showed masked gunmen bringing the soldiers to a bloodstained concrete river waterfront inside the presidential palaces complex in Tikrit, shooting them in the head and throwing them into the Tigris River.

Khalid Al Atbi, an Iraqi health official working with the forensic teams said initial indications were that the bodies exhumed so far were Speicher victims.

“It was a heartbreaking scene. We couldn’t prevent ourselves from breaking down in tears. What savage barbarian could kill 1,700 persons in cold blood?” he said.

After weeks of bitter clashes, Iraqi forces and allied Shiite militias, succeeded in retaking Tikrit from ISIL.

Their victory was helped by US-led coalition airstrikes, which were not initially part of the operation.

Iraqi state TV showed forensic teams digging in an open area, helped by bulldozers as family members stood nearby.

The bodies were tagged with yellow tags while weeping soldiers and relatives lit candles and laid flowers alongside the covered remains. One clip showed unearthed skeletal remains still wearing combat boots.

“The work is continuing and we expect to discover more mass graves in different areas,” Mr Amin said. “We expect huge number of bodies to be unearthed.”

During their blitz last year, the ISIL extremists also carried out other mass killings in other areas. One of those massacres was outside the country’s second-largest city of Mosul where they forced some 600 Shiite inmates captured from Badoosh prison to kneel along the edge of a nearby ravine and shot them with automatic weapons.

The prisoners had been serving sentences for a range of crimes, from murder and assault to nonviolent offenses.

And in Anbar province, the militants shot dead dozens of pro-government Sunni tribal fighters in public areas after capturing their towns.

The ISIL onslaught plunged Iraq into its worst crisis since the 2011 US troop withdrawal from the country.

The militants have also targeted Iraq’s indigenous religious minorities, including Christians and followers of the ancient Yazidi faith, forcing tens of thousands from their homes.

Since then, ISIL has carved out a self-styled caliphate in the large area straddling the Iraqi-Syrian border that it now controls.

In early August, the United States launched airstrikes on the militant group in Iraq, in an effort to help Iraqi forces fight back against the growing threat by the ISIL militants, who still hold the northern Iraqi province of Ninevah and most of the western province of Anbar, in addition to small areas north of Baghdad, along with a large swath of land in neighboring Syria.

Also on Tuesday, ISIL started broadcasting in English on the militants’ Al Bayan radio station, with a fluent English-speaking presenter, according to the SITE Intelligence Group, a US group that monitors militant websites.

The broadcast on Tuesday gave the overview of recent attacks ISIL launched in Iraq, Syria and Libya.

* Associated Press, Reuters, Agence France-Presse