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IRAQ WARS
Iraq faces painful legacy of mass graves
by Staff Writers
Arbil, Iraq (AFP) June 25, 2012

Turkey bombs Kurd positions in Iraq
Ankara (AFP) June 24, 2012 - Turkish warplanes have carried out strikes on suspected Kurdish militant targets in northern Iraq, the army said on Sunday.

The general staff said on its website the air strikes had hit "nine targets belonging to the separatist terrorist organisation" referring to the outlawed Kurdistan Workers' Party (PKK), on June 22-24.

The jets safely returned to their bases in Turkey, it said.

The air strikes are the second since a rebel attack on an army post near the Iraqi border on Tuesday killed eight Turkish soldiers, and wounded another 19. Local officials said around 20 rebels were killed in the attack.

The PKK, listed as a terrorist organisation by Turkey and much of the international community, took up arms in the Kurdish-majority southeast Turkey in 1984, sparking a conflict that has claimed some 45,000 lives.


Iraq wants to put the legacy of murderous dictator Saddam Hussein behind it, but faces a huge need for specialists to excavate mass graves thought to contain at least half a million unidentified victims.

The stakes are high for Iraq, a country seeking reconciliation with itself, where countless families lost all trace of their relatives during the dictator's 1979-2003 rule or the terrible internecine violence in the years after his overthrow.

Families have not been able to come to terms with the loss, as they have never found the bodies of their loved ones or learned the circumstances of their deaths.

But the process of excavating the mass graves and identifying the victims, which could take decades because of its scope and difficult terrain that includes landmines and unexploded ordinance, requires a highly skilled workforce that does not exist in Iraq.

The International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), created on the initiative of former US president Bill Clinton and financed by Western states, has since 2008 held courses for employees of the Forensic Institute and the ministry of human rights aimed at addressing the shortfall.

-- Plastic skeletons --

The courses, offered in Arbil, the capital of the autonomous Kurdistan region in north Iraq, include plastic skeletons buried in the garden of the hospital where they are held.

"We try to make the scenario as realistic as possible," said James Fenn, the coordinator of the programme, pointing to 20 participants who were carefully digging in the soil.

Gradually, the outlines of a dozen "bodies" emerge, some with their hands and feet bound, or showing signs of trauma.

The team makes a thorough record of the "grave", making drawings on graph paper and lists of bones and evidence discovered. The approach is very scientific and rigorous.

"We have learned to use a trowel and to dig without using machines like bulldozers, as they cause damage and may erase lots of evidence," said Salah Hussein, one of the trainees.

One of his colleagues, Thamer Hassan, has a brother who has been missing since 1987.

"Maybe he is in one of the graves," Hassan said, adding that despite this, his motivation was his "duty" as an employee of the ministry of human rights.

Once they have been exhumed, the bones are given to another team from the Forensic Institute in Baghdad, who are charged with examining them.

The trainees examine the bones on a table, trying to determine how many people they might have belonged to, their age and their sex -- and listing the details with care.

"It's important for the families," said Dr Dunia Abboud, a 26-year-old dentist. "A lot of families lost a member and don't know what happened to them."

"We try to help them," Abboud said. "This helps to do justice."

-- At least 270 mass graves --

Some 170 people have been trained since 2008, but the need is huge, said Johnathan McCaskill, the head of Iraq programmes for ICMP.

The Iraqi government is working under the assumption that there are 500,000 missing people, but some estimates put the number of missing from repression under Saddam's rule, especially against the Kurds and Shiites in the 1980s and 1990s, at more than one million.

"The information we started up with was that there are at least 270 different mass graves in the country," McCaskill said.

Most of Iraq's mass graves date from the time of Saddam's rule, he said, but it is possible that there are some from the bloody sectarian fighting that came in the years after his overthrow, in which tens of thousands of people were killed.

McCaskill said that after Saddam's fall in 2003, some people began to dig on their own, looking for relatives, though this has since been prohibited by law.

The ICMP is also working with the Iraqi government on a DNA identification programme with much more reliable technology.

But it is complex and expensive. Samples are currently analysed at the ICMP headquarters in Sarajevo.

Meanwhile, the training will continue for at least two years. But is a course enough to prepare someone for something so disturbing?

Thamer Hassan thinks so, saying: "I am ready to work in real graves."

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Iraq PM must go for reforms to happen: Sadr
Najaf, Iraq (AFP) June 24, 2012 - Iraqi Prime Minister Nuri al-Maliki needs to be removed for reforms to take place, powerful Shiite cleric Moqtada al-Sadr said on Sunday, adding that his MPs would back a no-confidence vote if needed.

"Reforms are the main goal, and withdrawing confidence precedes these reforms," Sadr told reporters in the Shiite holy city of Najaf, likening the situation to the need to wash before prayers.

"We want to pray, but our prayer will not be correct unless we have ablution before," he said. "The reforms cannot be implemented without putting pressure on the government."

Sadr said he does not want to withdraw confidence from Maliki, but that he would support such a move if needed.

"I do not want to withdraw confidence, nor does anyone else, but our first and last request is reform and partnership, and not marginalising the others," the cleric said.

He also reiterated that if his parliamentary bloc's votes were needed to unseat Maliki, he would provide them.

"I said, and I am still saying, and this is a promise from my side to the other blocs, that if their votes reach 124 ... I will add to them the remaining 40 votes."

When asked about the nature of the reforms he seeks, Sadr referred to a list of points he presented in late April.

The points include giving priority to Iraqi interests over sectarian, ethnic and party interests, and having minorities "participate in building Iraq, politically, economically and in security."

Appointing permanent ministers to security posts, including the defence ministry, that have remained unfilled since 2010 was also among his points, as was standing "strongly against any internal or foreign threats against any component of the Iraqi people."

Sadr was not optimistic about the stabilisation of the political situation in Iraq.

"In Iraq, the crisis never ends, it is either put aside or the others will ignore it, so it will appear again at a different time," he said.

Sadr, the head of the Ahrar parliamentary bloc, an important part of Maliki's national unity government, has previously criticised the premier as a "dictator" hungry for acclaim, and accused him of seeking to postpone or cancel elections.

An effort to persuade President Jalal Talabani to call a no-confidence vote stalled earlier this month when he said that Maliki's opponents lacked the votes to oust him.

That decision meant the only way Maliki's opponents could press their drive for a no-confidence motion was by requesting that he appear before parliament and then holding the vote.

Parliament speaker Osama al-Nujaifi said on Thursday that Maliki opponents are to ask in the coming days for him to appear before the house in a renewed bid to oust him.

Iraq has been hit by a series of intertwined political crises that began in mid-December, with accusations by Iraqiya that Maliki was concentrating power in his hands, and has escalated into calls to unseat him.

The crises have paralysed government, especially parliament, which has passed no significant legislation except for the budget, while other important measures such as a hydrocarbons law regulating the country's oil sector have been delayed.



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IRAQ WARS
Bombings, shooting kill nine in Iraq
Baghdad (AFP) June 22, 2012
Two roadside bombs killed at least six people on the outskirts of Baghdad Friday while gunmen shot dead three policemen at a city checkpoint, officials said, in the latest in a wave of attacks in Iraq. One bomb exploded in the main market in Al-Husseiniyah, a Shiite-majority area on Baghdad's northeast outskirts, while the second detonated after emergency personnel arrived, an interior minis ... read more


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