Originally published Monday, November 13, 2006 at 12:00 AM
Iraq's morgues are overwhelmed
Baghdad's morgues are full. With no space to store bodies, some victims of the sectarian slaughter are not being kept for relatives to claim...
The Associated Press
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Baghdad's morgues are full.
With no space to store bodies, some victims of the sectarian slaughter are not being kept for relatives to claim, but photographed, numbered and quickly interred in government cemeteries. Men fearful of an anonymous burial are tattooing their thighs with names and phone numbers.
In October, a particularly bloody month for Iraqi civilians, about 1,600 bodies were turned in at the Baghdad central morgue, said its director, Dr. Abdul-Razaq al-Obaidi. The city's morgues, built to hold 130 bodies at most, now hold more than 500, he says.
Bodies are sent for burial every three or four days just to make room for the daily intake, sometimes making corpse identification impossible.
"We can't remove all the bodies just so that one can be identified and then put them all back in again," al-Obaidi said. "We simply don't have the staff."
Al-Obaidi said the daily crush of relatives is an emotional and logistical burden.
While no one knows how many Iraqis have died, daily tallies of violent deaths by The Associated Press average nearly 45 a day. About half of them are unidentified bodies discovered on city streets or floating in the Tigris River.
The United Nations estimates about 100 violent deaths daily, and the Iraqi health minister last week put civilian deaths over the entire 44 months since the U.S. invasion at about 150,000 — close to the U.N. figure.
In morgues across Iraq where capacity stretches beyond thin, bodies are being turned away.
"We have to reject them," Hadi al-Itabi of the morgue in Kut, southeast of Baghdad, said he told men who turned in the bodies of six slain border policemen last week. "We just don't have enough cold storage."
Iraq's bureaucracy of death is overwhelmed. The task of identifying and interring bodies is all the more difficult because of the clandestine nature of the killings: Iraqis are being killed far from home and in secret, the victims of kidnappers and sectarian death squads.
With nowhere else to look when a friend or loved one goes missing, family members first check the local morgue.
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Abbas Beyat joined the line outside Baghdad's central morgue after his brother Hussein disappeared a month ago while driving through the mainly Sunni town of Tarmiyah, 30 miles north of Baghdad. The family had paid a $60,000 ransom to an intermediary who then disappeared with the money.
"There were three piles, each with about 20 bodies," Beyat, 56, said, describing the scene inside the morgue.
"The clerk told me to dig through them until I found my brother. I had to lift them off until I found him," he said.
Like many of those abducted, Hussein Beyat bore the marks of torture, with holes from an electrical drill visible in his skull, Beyat said.
Others never find their loved ones' bodies at all.
Health Ministry officials are discussing how to handle the overflow of bodies. One proposal under consideration is the use of refrigerated trucks.
With government unable to handle the load, the task of burial usually falls to Islamic charities and other social groups that rely on public donations.
One of the biggest, the organization of powerful Shiite cleric Muqtada al-Sadr, has buried more than 3,000 unidentified bodies outside the southern holy city of Karbala since Sept. 1, according to an al-Sadr aide, Raad al-Karbalaie.
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