logo
Iraq begins excavating mass grave thought to hold thousands of Islamic State group victims

Iraq begins excavating mass grave thought to hold thousands of Islamic State group victims

France 246 hours ago
Iraqi authorities have begun excavating the site of a mass grave believed to contain thousands of victims of the Islamic State (IS) group near Mosul city, the project's director told AFP on Sunday.
The first phase, which was launched on August 10, includes surface-level excavation at the Khasfa site, director Ahmed al-Assadi said.
An AFP correspondent visiting the site in northern Iraq on Sunday said the team unearthed human skulls buried in the sand.
Khasfa is located near Mosul, where the IS group had established the capital of their self-declared "caliphate" before being defeated in Iraq in late 2017.
Assadi said that there were no precise figures for the numbers of victims buried there – one of dozens of mass graves the IS group left behind in Iraq – but a UN report from 2018 said Khasfa was likely the country's largest.
Official estimates put the number of bodies buried at the site at at least 4,000, with the possibility of thousands more.
The project director said the victims buried there include "soldiers executed by IS", members of the Yazidi minority and residents of Mosul.
Exhuming the bodies from Khasfa is particularly difficult, Assadi said, as underground sulphur water makes the earth very porous.
The water may have also eroded the human remains, complicating DNA identification of victims, he added.
Assadi said further studies will be required before his team can dig deeper and exhume bodies at the site – a sinkhole about 150 metres deep and 110 metres wide.
The operation is initially limited to gathering visible human remains and surface evidence while preparing for a full exhumation, which officials say will require international support.
Iraqi authorities said it was the site of "one of the worst massacres" committed by IS group jihadists, executing 280 in a single day in 2016, many of them interior ministry employees.
A decade after genocide, Iraq's Yazidis make bittersweet return to Sinjar
12:51
In a lightning advance that began in 2014, the IS group had seized large swaths Iraq and neighbouring Syria, enforcing a strict interpretation of Islamic law and committing widespread abuses.
At its peak, the IS group ruled an area half the size of the United Kingdom in Iraq and Syria and was notorious for its brutality. It beheaded civilians and enslaved and raped thousands of women from the Yazidi community, one of Iraq's oldest religious minorities.
The United Nations estimates the jihadists left behind more than 200 mass graves which might contain as many as 12,000 bodies.
In addition to IS group-era mass graves, Iraqi authorities continue to unearth such sites dating to the rule of Saddam Hussein, who was toppled in a US-led invasion in 2003.
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Iraq begins excavating mass grave thought to hold thousands of Islamic State group victims
Iraq begins excavating mass grave thought to hold thousands of Islamic State group victims

France 24

time6 hours ago

  • France 24

Iraq begins excavating mass grave thought to hold thousands of Islamic State group victims

Iraqi authorities have begun excavating the site of a mass grave believed to contain thousands of victims of the Islamic State (IS) group near Mosul city, the project's director told AFP on Sunday. The first phase, which was launched on August 10, includes surface-level excavation at the Khasfa site, director Ahmed al-Assadi said. An AFP correspondent visiting the site in northern Iraq on Sunday said the team unearthed human skulls buried in the sand. Khasfa is located near Mosul, where the IS group had established the capital of their self-declared "caliphate" before being defeated in Iraq in late 2017. Assadi said that there were no precise figures for the numbers of victims buried there – one of dozens of mass graves the IS group left behind in Iraq – but a UN report from 2018 said Khasfa was likely the country's largest. Official estimates put the number of bodies buried at the site at at least 4,000, with the possibility of thousands more. The project director said the victims buried there include "soldiers executed by IS", members of the Yazidi minority and residents of Mosul. Exhuming the bodies from Khasfa is particularly difficult, Assadi said, as underground sulphur water makes the earth very porous. The water may have also eroded the human remains, complicating DNA identification of victims, he added. Assadi said further studies will be required before his team can dig deeper and exhume bodies at the site – a sinkhole about 150 metres deep and 110 metres wide. The operation is initially limited to gathering visible human remains and surface evidence while preparing for a full exhumation, which officials say will require international support. Iraqi authorities said it was the site of "one of the worst massacres" committed by IS group jihadists, executing 280 in a single day in 2016, many of them interior ministry employees. A decade after genocide, Iraq's Yazidis make bittersweet return to Sinjar 12:51 In a lightning advance that began in 2014, the IS group had seized large swaths Iraq and neighbouring Syria, enforcing a strict interpretation of Islamic law and committing widespread abuses. At its peak, the IS group ruled an area half the size of the United Kingdom in Iraq and Syria and was notorious for its brutality. It beheaded civilians and enslaved and raped thousands of women from the Yazidi community, one of Iraq's oldest religious minorities. The United Nations estimates the jihadists left behind more than 200 mass graves which might contain as many as 12,000 bodies. In addition to IS group-era mass graves, Iraqi authorities continue to unearth such sites dating to the rule of Saddam Hussein, who was toppled in a US-led invasion in 2003.

Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct
Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct

France 24

time11 hours ago

  • France 24

Singapore key exports slip in July as US shipments tumble 42.7 pct

Southeast Asia's second-largest economy is heavily reliant on international trade and is vulnerable to any global slowdown induced by the tariffs -- even if Singapore only faces a baseline 10 percent levy from US President Donald Trump. On August 6, Trump announced a 100 percent tariff on chips from firms that do not invest in the United States, and threatened levies of up to 250 percent on pharmaceutical imports. The 42.7 percent July contraction in main exports to the US -- Singapore's biggest market -- was largely caused by a 93.5 percent decline in pharmaceutical shipments, the government body Enterprise Singapore said on Monday. Meanwhile, exports of specialised machinery dropped 45.8 percent and food preparations were down 48.8 percent. Non-oil domestic shipments to China and Indonesia also declined in July, but grew to the EU, Taiwan, South Korea, and Hong Kong. The city-state last Tuesday raised its 2025 economic growth forecast, but warned the outlook for the rest of the year remains clouded by global uncertainty, in part due to US tariffs. The trade ministry lifted its gross domestic product (GDP) growth forecast to 1.5-2.5 percent from an earlier range of 0-2.0 percent. Prime Minister Lawrence Wong on Sunday said that he took "little comfort" from the 10 percent baseline tariff rate the US imposed on Singapore. "Because no one knows if, or when, the US might raise the baseline, or set higher tariffs on specific industries like pharmaceuticals and semiconductors," he said in a National Day speech. "What we do know is that there will be more trade barriers in the world. That means small and open economies like us will feel the squeeze," Wong added. © 2025 AFP

Video of protest outside Indonesian court falsely linked to Thai-Cambodian border clashes
Video of protest outside Indonesian court falsely linked to Thai-Cambodian border clashes

AFP

time11 hours ago

  • AFP

Video of protest outside Indonesian court falsely linked to Thai-Cambodian border clashes

"Soldiers' families gather to demand (authorities) find the missing bodies of unaccounted for Thai soldiers," reads the Khmer-language caption of a Facebook video shared on August 5, 2025. The video, which has been viewed more than 13,000 times, shows a large crowd that rushes into a two-storey building with an orange-tiled roof. It circulated after Cambodia and Thailand agreed to a truce that came into effect on July 29, ending five days of clashes on their 800-kilometre (500-mile) boundary that killed at least 43 people on both sides (archived here and here). The fighting, the latest eruption of violence in a long-standing dispute over contested border temples, also displaced more than 300,000 people. Following the truce, Thailand's deputy defence minister Nattapon Narkphanit called on Cambodia to retrieve the bodies of its fallen troops at the border and Cambodian social media users also claimed the corpses of Thai soldiers had been left at the frontier (archived here and here). Image Screenshot of the false Facebook post captured on August 16, 2025, with a red X added by AFP The footage was also shared in similar Khmer-language posts on Facebook and TikTok, as well as in a few Thai posts linking it to the border spat. But the video does not show either Thai or Cambodian protesters, and is unrelated to the recent clashes. Disinformation about the conflict has continued to spread online despite the ceasefire, with misleading visuals and emotionally fuelled falsehoods stoking fear and hatred between the neighbours (archived link). Indonesian protest A reverse image search on Google using keyframes from the falsely shared video led to the same clip posted on TikTok on July 31 (archived link). Its Indonesian-language caption reads, "Demonstration #MandoCourt #LandMafia". Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared video (left) and the July 31 TikTok clip (right) Subsequent keyword searches led to reports in local media outlets the Manado Post and Kompas TV on July 31 about hundreds of people rallying outside the Manado District Court in Indonesia's North Sulawesi province (archived here and here). According to the reports, protesters were demanding the cancellation of the court-ordered seizure of land in Wisma Sabang, a district in Manado. A similar video of the protest was also posted on the Manado Times' Instagram account on July 31 (archived link). Image Screenshot comparisons of clips from the falsely shared video (left) and the Manado Times' Instagram account (centre and right), with similarities highlighted by AFP Features in the falsely shared video -- such as a red-and-white flag and text on the building also match Google Maps photos of the Manado District Court (archived link). The flag is Indonesia's national flag and the text reads "Pengadilan Negeri", which translates as "court district". Image Screenshot comparison of the falsely shared clip (left) and the Google Maps photo (right), with corresponding elements highlighted by AFP AFP has previously debunked a similar false claim about supposed unrecovered bodies at the Thailand-Cambodia border, as well as other misinformation related to the countries' border clashes.

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store