In answer to the number of estimated number of bodies in mass graves all over Iraq................ Iraqis uncover thousands in mass graves U.S. commander: Troops to crack down on looters Wednesday, May 14, 2003 Posted: 10:21 PM EDT (0221 GMT) An Iraqi woman on Wednesday mourns at the site of mass graves found in Mahawil. Some 1,500 bodies have been uncovered there so far. Families dig through mass graves to find remains of loved ones in Mawahil, Iraq The new U.S. civil administrator for Iraq. The U.S. is trying to secure control of Iraq's oil industry, but will it succeed? U.S. MILITARY BRIEFING, WEDNESDAY U.S. Lt. Gen. David McKiernan, coalition commander, and Maj. Gen. Buford Blout, 3rd Infantry Division commander ?McKiernan: Mass grave sites being discovered in Iraq are high on the U.S. military's list for security arrangements. ? Blount: Looters in Iraq are not to be shot by troops unless soldiers' lives are endangered. ? McKiernan: A policy is being developed with U.S. civil administrator L. Paul Bremer to establish rules for weapons ownership in Iraq. MAHAWIL, Iraq (CNN) -- The head of an Iraqi forensic team said Wednesday he expects to find as many as 15,000 bodies buried at mass graves about 55 miles (90 kilometers) south of Baghdad. Hundreds of relatives of missing Iraqis gathered at the site in Mahawil, seeking to find out the fate of their loved ones. The forensic team has uncovered 1,500 bodies so far, identifying only a fraction of them. (Gallery: Images from Mahawil, On the Scene: Jane Arraf) The bodies are mostly of Iraqi Shiites who died in an uprising against Saddam Hussein following the 1991 Persian Gulf War, according to Human Rights Watch spokesman Peter Bouckaert and local officials. Bouckaert said the crude means of uncovering the bodies -- with a bulldozer -- was destroying evidence from the burials. He cited the example of an Iraqi identity document, with its number still intact, blowing away in the wind. "This little piece of information could actually have led a family to recover the skeleton of their relative, but because it's blown away from this pile -- as we see stuff blowing around all over the place -- that family probably won't have the answer they seek here today," he said. (Human rights groups' concerns) Touring the site Wednesday, Ahmad Chalabi, head of the opposition Iraqi National Congress, said the mass grave was evidence supporting the U.S.-led military action to remove Saddam from power. Posted on 01/23/2004 9:06:45 AM PST by xzins BAGHDAD -- They were killed in their hospital beds and buried in the hospital flower gardens, some with their arms still wrapped in bandages or IVs still connected. And they were killed on long death marches in northern Iraq--Kurdish women and children, separated from their families and carrying the few household items they could drag with them. Wherever they were killed, many were blindfolded and shot in the forehead. Saddam Hussein's whole country became a killing field. Mass graves "are everywhere," said Sandy Hodgkinson, a U.S. State Department attorney who has been working with Iraq's Human Rights Ministry, the agency in charge of investigating the mass graves. "You follow reports, and they turn up in places you would never suspect." Iraq is littered with bodies stuffed dozens at a time into cemetery plots, bodies shoved over cliffs, tossed in lakes or hidden in farm fields where vegetables still grow, said Saad Sultan, 32, a lawyer and detective with the Human Rights Ministry's mass graves research team. So far, 282 possible mass grave sites have been identified, 55 have been confirmed and 20 have been explored. But nine months after Hussein's fall, the total number of graves is unknown. So, too, is the number buried, though the figure is estimated to be in the hundreds of thousands. Among Kurds alone, for example, there are at least 182,000 people missing, 8,000 of them from one clan, the Barzanis. Source: http://www.chicagotribune.com/news/nationworld/chi-0401210319jan21,1,5792396.story In reports emerging six months into the United States occupation of Iraq, a U.S. human rights attorney, Sandra Hodgkinson, reported 300,000 bodies have been reportedly buried in some 260 mass graves in Iraq. "We have found mass graves of women and children, with bullet holes in their heads and we have found mass graves of husbands and fathers out in the desert where they were buried," Hodgkinson said. "We met survivors who crawled out of mass graves after being buried alive. We met with families whose loved ones did not escape," suggesting the graves contain exclusively the bodies of those killed by the regime of Saddam Hussein. Sandra Hodgkinson Sandra Hodgkinson served as the Coalition Provisional Authority's director of human rights in 2003 after the United States' attack against Iraq. An on-line military publication places Hodgkinson in Baghdad with Department of Defense reconstruction and humanitarian assistance planners March 16, 2003, nearly three weeks before US tanks rolled into the city's downtown. The magazine, dcmilitary.com, reports that Hodgkinson worked several years before the war developing plans for human rights investigations in Iraq: "The human rights specialist is from the State Department's Bureau of Democracy, Human Rights and Labor. She is also a Navy Reserve judge advocate general officer with the International and Operational Law Unit at the Pentagon. She's worked as a military prosecutor and an instructor in crimes against humanity issues through the International Military Education and Training program. "Under the Iraqi Liberation Act of 1998, defense officials provided some war crimes and crimes against humanity training at the Defense Institute of International Legal Studies in Newport, R.I., for the Iraqi opposition. 'I was the course coordinator and an instructor for that program,' Hodgkinson said, 'which early on, got me working with Iraqi opposition in areas related to crimes against humanity, human rights protection and how to investigate and preserve evidence of these crimes.' "In her civilian capacity, Hodgkinson has participated in the State Department's Future of Iraq Project, and about two years ago, she spoke at a Human Rights and Transitional Justice seminar arranged by the Iraqi National Congress in London. In February she began working with the Defense Department's Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance, deploying first to Kuwait and then to Baghdad on March 16." [1] The following is a web address by A Shia News Agency documenting the Hussein crimes against humanity. Shia Muslims are not know for their love of America and would hardly spout the pro-Bush speil. http://www.shianews.com/hi/articles/politics/0000374.php Here is another by the organization Archeologist for Human Rights documenting the sites to be investigated for more mass graves. http://216.239.41.104/search?q=cache:1pKwKKeB67gJ:www.afhr.org/download/english.pdf+number+of+bodies+found+in+mass+graves+in+Iraq&hl=en&ie=UTF-8 Human Rights Watch, also not a particularly political organization has articles on line??? Iraq: Mass Graves Still Unprotected (EspaƱol) Sites Near Basra Being Tampered With (Basra, May 11, 2003) Coalition forces must immediately secure sites of potential mass graves in order to preserve the evidence necessary for identifying the remains and initiating prosecutions against human rights violators, Human Rights Watch urged today. Background on the Crisis in Iraq ?People are excavating mass graves around Basra at an increasing pace. Unless coalition forces secure these sites and show people that they will initiate a process to answer their questions, a tremendous amount of evidence about Iraq?s bloody past will be destroyed.? Sam Zia-Zarifi Researcher for Human Rights Watch Over the last two weeks, several mass grave sites near Basra have been excavated without prior forensic analysis, making it may make it more difficult or even impossible to accurately identify the remains and to begin proper criminal investigations. Human Rights Watch has directly identified several mass grave sites where bodies have been removed for reburial without any forensic analysis. ?People are excavating mass graves around Basra at an increasing pace,? said Sam Zia-Zarifi, researcher for Human Rights Watch. ?They?re desperate for information about their lost relatives. Unless coalition forces secure these sites and show people that they will initiate a process to answer their questions, a tremendous amount of evidence about Iraq?s bloody past will be destroyed.? On April 20, Human Rights Watch requested assistance from coalition forces in securing one such site west of al-Zubayr near Basra. Despite promises from the Office of Reconstruction and Humanitarian Assistance (ORHA), which is responsible for such activity, Human Rights Watch has not seen any signs of the site being properly secured or prepared for investigation as of May 6???? This from a Balkan website???? In early June, Paul Bremmer, head of the Coalition Provisional Authority in Iraq, invited members of Bosnia's International Committee for Missing Persons (ICMP) to visit Iraq to determine whether Bosnia's experience with identifying exhumed bodies could be put to use in Iraq. ICMP President James Kimsey and ICMP Chief of Staff Gordon Bacon were quick to offer their services. "It is a tribute to the ICMP and to the government and institutions of Bosnia and Herzegovina that the model developed here is seen as possibly applicable in other parts of the world, and at this time especially in Iraq. . I hope we can show how our experience can bring relief to the suffering and loss now being felt by the people of Iraq," Bacon said in a 16 June press release, shortly before departing for Iraq. The ICMP believes that Iraq has between 250,000 and 300,000 missing persons, almost 10 times more than all of the former Yugoslav countries put together--a situation it says would make identification impossible without Bosnian help. "We understand that they have a difficult situation there, with lists with missing persons more than 15 years old, and I believe that [the ICMP's] DNA testing is the best solution for them," Bacon told TOL upon his return from Iraq in mid-June???. I am not a Bush supporter. Have not voted for him in the past and do not plan to this year. His lies, if they are lies, should be exposed as such. However, if he BELIEVED that the intelligence supplied by various intelligence agencies from around the world was true and a fairly accurate picture of what the Hussein regime had in the way of WMD's, then he is not a liar.After all, Dems and Repubs on intelligences committees in both the House and Senate also believed the reports. Hindsight is a wonderful thing-20/20 vision. I want to read the document 237 lies before I make a judgement on that.