
BAGHDAD, Iraq — Mystery and dread shrouded a freshly discovered mass grave site filled with the remains of at least 50 and perhaps as many as 100 people, some of them children, in a river valley northeast of Baghdad.
Iraqi police announced the find Saturday after conducting a raid in the area and stumbling upon the badly decomposed bodies a day earlier.
The dead were buried in one of the many fruit, date and palm orchards that line the Diyala River near the town of Khalis, north of the provincial capital of Baqubah.
Iraqis long associated mass graves with the atrocities of former President Saddam Hussein’s regime, including executions of Kurdish and Shiite Muslim civilians suspected of sympathizing with anti-government rebels in the 1980s and 1990s.
But in the five years since the U.S.-led invasion of Iraq, mass killings also became a tactic in sectarian warfare between Shiite Muslims and Sunni Arabs that threatened to break the country apart.
U.S. and Iraqi officials said Saturday that they still had not confirmed the identities of the victims in the newly found grave.
“The skeletal remains appear to have been in the grave for a long time, and we have not yet determined who might be responsible for their death and burial,” Maj. Winfield Danielson, a U.S. military spokesman, said by e-mail.
But Iraqi police and local residents think they were killed and buried sometime in the past five years. An Iraqi security official who saw the grave site said the bodies appeared to have been dumped over a period of time, rather than all at once, and that only 13 had been excavated so far.
Some locals suspect the site was a dumping ground used by Shiite Muslim militias disposing remains of Sunni victims. Authorities last week arrested the mayor of Khalis on suspicion of participating in such activities. The town is considered to be a hub of Shiite militias associated with cleric Muqtada al-Sadr’s Mahdi Army, although the outlying countryside is mostly under the sway of Sunni extremists.
The area was once a stronghold of Hussein’s Baath Party, but Shiite militiamen largely took control over the mostly Sunni inhabitants in 2006, said Khaled Abed Rahman, 35, a local high school history teacher.
“Sometimes during the hard days, they established checkpoints while wearing police uniforms and detained people based on their (sectarian) identities,” he said.
The perpetrators might have been groups associated with the Sunni insurgent organization al-Qaeda in Iraq. Two years ago, Sunni insurgents declared the province part of a self-styled caliphate and launched a campaign of kidnapping and assassination.
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