publish time

03/08/2019

author name Arab Times

publish time

03/08/2019

Baghdad vows full cooperation to end humanitarian tragedy

BAGHDAD, Aug 3, (KUNA): The Iraqi Foreign Ministry declared on Friday “identifying” remains of 32 (deceased) Kuwaiti prisoners who were found in a mass grave in South Iraq months ago.

The ministry spokesperson, Ahmad Al-Sahaf, said in a statement that the “Iraqi technical team tasked with the file of the missing Kuwaitis and prisoners was able, in cooperation with the Red Cross, to locate the mass grave in the Governorate of Al-Muthanna on March 6.” The grave contained 46 human corpses, he said, adding that preliminary DNA examination revealed that 32 of them were of Kuwaitis who had been missing.

The ministry spokesperson also said in the statement that Iraq it would cooperate with Kuwaiti authorities to transfer the remains to Kuwait and provide proper support for forthcoming tasks in the case. Al-Sahaf has affirmed that Iraq is seeking with utter concern to end ramifications of this humanitarian tragedy that involved the Kuwaiti brothers in the beginning of the “Saddami invasion of their country in 1990 and determine destiny of the missing and Kuwaiti prisoners.” He was alluding to the Aug 2, 1990 invasion, carried out by troops of the executed Iraqi ruler at the time, Saddam Hussein. Iraq will spare no effort for determining destiny of the other missing Kuwaitis and “what has been discovered recently depicts continuation of the efforts that has led to information about the remains,” he said.

Meanwhile, Assistant Foreign Minister for International Organizations Nasser Al-Hayyen stated Friday that more examinations are required to determine the identity of the 32 corpses recently exhumed from a mass grave in southern Iraq. “Knowing identities of the exhumed bodies needs further examinations,” Al-Hayyen told KUNA, noting that Iraq has recently sent to Kuwaiti results of the DNA tests it carried out on the these bodies. He pointed out that Kuwait has presented an official request to Iraq to receive the recovered bodies to carry out its own tests and compare results with that its DNA database of Kuwaiti POWs and missing people.

Recognizing the identities of the recovered bodies is the sole responsibility of Kuwait’s General Department of Criminal Evidence which has the complete DNA database of related to the POWs and missing people, he clarified. He affirmed that once the identity of any body was known, his family would be notified.

Earlier Friday, the Iraqi Foreign Ministry declared “identifying” remains of 32 (deceased) Kuwaiti missing people who were found in a mass grave in South Iraq months ago.

The ministry spokesperson, Ahmad Al-Sahaf, said in a statement that the “Iraqi technical team tasked with the file of the missing Kuwaitis and prisoners was able, in cooperation with the Red Cross, to locate the mass grave in the Governorate of Al-Muthanna on March 6.” Iraq will spare no effort for determining destiny of the other missing Kuwaitis and “what has been discovered recently depicts continuation of the efforts that has led to information about the remains,” he said.