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News ID: 48331
Publish Date : 31 December 2017 - 21:27

Thousands Still Missing in Iraq Despite Victory Over Daesh

MOSUL, Iraq (Dispatches) -- Local officials say thousands of people, mostly men and teenage boys, remain missing in the wake of Iraqi victories against Daesh.
In Mosul alone, more than six months after Iraq declared victory, more than 3,000 people remain unaccounted for. Some are believed to have been killed by Daesh, while others were detained by security forces on suspicion of extremist ties.
Regardless, bureaucracy, inefficiency and neglect have left thousands of families in limbo.
Muhammad Karbouli is a member of Iraq's parliamentary committee on defense and security from Anbar province, where victory was declared in the cities of Ramadi and Fallujah more than a year ago. He says more than 2,900 people remain missing. When parents don't know the fate of their children, he warned, "tensions emerge."
Just south of Mosul, an unthinkable number of Iraqis are believed to be buried in a natural sinkhole that became one of the Daesh group’s most infamous mass graves. Some Iraqi officials estimate as many as 4,000 people were tossed into the cavernous, natural crevasse in the barren desert on the road linking Mosul to Baghdad, some already dead, others still living and buried alive.
An AP investigation has found at least 133 mass graves left behind by the defeated extremists, and only a handful have been exhumed. Many of the missing — especially the thousands of Yazidis unaccounted for since Daesh terrorists slaughtered and enslaved the minority — may ultimately be buried there. Estimates total between 11,000 and 13,000 bodies in the graves, according to the AP tally.
Meanwhile, fears of Daesh resurfacing in northern Iraq are on the rise. On Sunday, the death toll from a Friday night attack in Salahuddin continued to rise.
The attack took place as gunmen opened fire on a gathering of civilians in the Farahiya district, north of Balad and south of Tikrit. Witnesses told Kurdistan 24 that four people were killed and ten others wounded.
The assailants used automatic weapons and Improvised Explosive Devices (IED) to carry out the attack, some 90 kilometers north of Baghdad. Security forces clashed with the gunmen before they withdrew from the area.
On Saturday, deputy minister of peshmerga Sarbast Lazgin warned that Daesh militants were still at large in the town of Hawija, north of Tikrit and west of Kirkuk. The city was liberated two months ago by Iraqi security forces.
Speaking to Anadolu Agency, Lazgin claimed there was "precise information obtained that shows (Daesh) is still in Iraq,” and that it has dozens of "hideouts from which to launch their attacks.”
Lazgin suggested that the quick withdrawing of Iraqi forces following the liberation of Hawija and the lack of security forces in the area allowed militants to build up an insurgency.