Iraqi
River Carries Grotesque Cargo
By Mona Mahmoud &
Sebastian Usher
17 July, 2007
BBC
Five hundred mutilated
bodies dumped into the River Tigris have been washed up in two years
in the town of Suweira, 100km (62 miles) south of the Iraqi capital,
Baghdad. The BBC's Mona Mahmoud and Sebastian Usher have spoken to the
community through an Iraqi journalist to find out how they cope.
It
is a normal day on the murky waters of the Tigris for two fishermen
near Suweira.
The catch they have made
is nothing new to them, but it unveils its grim secrets slowly.
"Wait a minute,"
the first fisherman shouts out to his partner in their little fishing
boat after he finds a body in the river.
"His body is so decomposed...
His belly is cut open - he can't be lifted out."
"Does he have a head?"
he asks.
"No, it's been cut off,"
the other fisherman replies as he looks down into the water.
'Every day'
They power up the engine
to help them drag the decaying corpse into the boat.
When the body is safely aboard,
the fishermen describe how huge nets, intended to catch floating plants
and rubbish, catch the bodies as they drift downstream from Baghdad.
"This is happening every
day - two to three bodies a day," the first fisherman says.
"We find them in the
net, which is there to catch floating reeds."
The other fisherman says
the bodies cannot be picked up after sunset.
"We leave the body until
morning and then recover it, because if it is late in the evening no-one
can come with us," he says.
"Early in the morning,
we go and get the body, prepare his shroud - a plastic bag - until someone
comes from Suweira to take the body to hospital."
Unremitting flow
At a nearby hospital in Kut,
a bustling city of about 300,000 people, a forensic scientist quizzes
a policeman about the latest body he has brought in.
"Has the body been shot?"
he asks. "Does it have any bullet wounds?"
"Yes, his dishdasha
[traditional robe] is full of holes," the policeman replies.
"Is the body handcuffed
and blindfolded?" the scientist asks.
"No, it isn't,"
the policeman answers. "But his face is marked and we found a bullet
under the body."
The head of the hospital's
forensics department gives a sense of how unremitting the flow of bodies
has become.
"Up to now, we have
received about 500 bodies," he says.
"They range from 20
to 45-year-olds - most are male. We have received about 10 women aged
between 20 and 35."
"Most of them have been
shot or tortured. They are in an advanced state of decomposition, so
you can't stand to be close to them for long."
It takes them at least three
days to float downstream from where they have been dumped in the river.
Worst fears confirmed
Two workers in the morgue
note the clothes on each corpse meticulously.
"We take identifiable
marks for the body, because he doesn't have a name or anything else,"
one explains. "We rely on these marks."
"Sometimes the body
has a tattoo and from the tattoo we can identify him," says another.
Families in Baghdad now know
that when a relative goes missing, this is where he might be found.
Opposite the forensic department,
relatives call home to check descriptions of clothes and distinguishing
features - anything to give them a chance of identifying a missing family
member.
"My brother is missing,"
one man says. "He was on his way to Baghdad, but was murdered in
Yusufiya with a group of men who were with him."
"We identified the body
of one man who was with him," he adds.
"He'd been handcuffed
and blindfolded and shot three times in the head. There were clear signs
of torture on his body."
Some families have more luck,
at least in the sense of having their worst fears confirmed.
"We've been looking
for [my son] and three other men who were with him," an older man
from Mahaweel says.
"We met some people
and they told us to go to Suweira to look for him. I came here and they
told us, 'Go to Kut, you will find your son there'.
"I came to the hospital
in Kut and we found him with the others... I saw his picture."
Special graveyard
Many of the bodies, however,
remain unidentified.
The morgue is too small to
store them all and, in the heat, burial cannot be put off for long.
At the graveyard, a new section has been set aside for the bodies found
drifting down the river from Baghdad.
The people of Kut and Suweira
never expected such a grim cargo to come down their way from Baghdad.
Officials and volunteers
deal with the hundreds of bodies as best they can, but there is little
money and few resources.
Abdul Hussein, who runs the
graveyard, says they do what they can.
"The state pays the
wages of the workers. We also help any family member who is looking
for a body. If they don't have money, we help them," he explains.
"For burial, we dust
the body," he adds. "We could wash the body with water but
it is often too decomposed."
"The hair and nails
will fall off if we wash them and that is haram [forbidden]."
"In the past, we used
to strip the body of its clothes. Then we were ordered to leave their
clothes on, so they could still be identified."
Iraq 'in pain'
At last, the unknown corpses
are buried, but only lightly so that they can be exhumed for identification.
The gravediggers recite final
details of the victim. Unusually, two of those being buried are women.
"6563. 26 May. Female.
Write down a description of her clothes," Abdul Hussein says.
"What is she wearing?
An embroidered gown... Move her head from this side. Take a picture
of her."
Then it is the other woman's
turn:
"2656. This is her number.
Put it close to her head," he says. "OK, now throw the dust
on her."
The final ceremony is brief.
The gravediggers recite a prayer.
Abdul Hussein goes through
this every day.
"At the end of every
burial, I feel so sad for the families of the unidentified bodies,"
he says.
"I'm sad because Iraq
is always in pain - I feel terribly sad for the Iraqi people."
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