Teams excavate mass graves of Iraqi soldiers killed by IS

Graves suspected to contain remains of some 1,700 killed by Islamic State outside Tikrit

A soldier prays at a suspected mass grave pf Shia soldiers from Camp Speicher who were killed by Islamic State militants last year. Photograph: Reuters/Stringer
A soldier prays at a suspected mass grave pf Shia soldiers from Camp Speicher who were killed by Islamic State militants last year. Photograph: Reuters/Stringer

Iraqi forensic teams began on Monday excavating 12 suspected mass grave sites thought to hold the corpses of as many as 1,700 soldiers massacred last summer by Islamic State militants as they swept across northern Iraq.

The mass killings last June of Shia soldiers from Camp Speicher, a former US base outside the Sunni city of Tikrit, has become a symbol of the brutality of Islamic State fighters and their hatred for Iraq's Shia majority.

The images of Shia soldiers being machine-gunned in their hundreds, posted online by the jihadists, could rank as the deadliest single act of bloodshed during a decade of periodic sectarian war in Iraq.

A member of an Iraqi forensic team at the site where the suspected mass graves of Shia soldiers killed by Islamic State militants were discovered. Photograph: Reuters/Stringer
A member of an Iraqi forensic team at the site where the suspected mass graves of Shia soldiers killed by Islamic State militants were discovered. Photograph: Reuters/Stringer
Iraqi forensic teams began on Monday excavating 12 suspected mass grave sites thought to hold the corpses of as many as 1,700 soldiers massacred last summer by Islamic State militants as they swept across northern Iraq. Photograph: Reuters/Stringer
Iraqi forensic teams began on Monday excavating 12 suspected mass grave sites thought to hold the corpses of as many as 1,700 soldiers massacred last summer by Islamic State militants as they swept across northern Iraq. Photograph: Reuters/Stringer

The exhumation of burial sites on the late dictator Saddam Hussein’s presidential compound came days after Islamic State militants were driven from the city by Iraqi forces and Shia paramilitaries.

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“We dug up the first mass grave site today. Until now we found at least 20 bodies. Initial indications show indisputably that they were from the Speicher victims,” said Khalid al-Atbi, an Iraqi health official working with the forensic team sent to Tikrit.

“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 asked.

Survivors of Speicher have described their ordeal last June as the Iraqi military chain of command unravelled and Islamic State’s Sunni fighters descended on Tikrit, rounding up Shia soldiers for slaughter.

The victims’ families, who often grow angry at Iraq’s political class for failing to provide them proper answers, have wondered for months about the fate of their friends and loved ones.

"The only positive thing is the victory in Tikrit," said, Ali Hamad, whose cousin Kamal went missing at Speicher.

“We are happy. At least the families will soon know the fate of their sons and cousins,” he said.

Reuters