Daesh corpses in Misrata await fate in containers

An official walks near a refrigerated container where the bodies of Daesh fighters are kept, in Misrata, Libya. (AFP)
Updated 15 November 2017
Follow

Daesh corpses in Misrata await fate in containers

MISRATA, Libya: Hundreds of corpses of Daesh fighters have lain stored for the past year in a row of refrigerated containers in the Libyan city of Misrata awaiting a final decision on their fate.
“The temperature must be kept at between -18 and -20 (Celsius) for the bodies to remain conserved,” said Ali Tuwaileb at a high security anti-organized crime complex in the city.
Around 700 bodies have been housed at the improvised morgue ever since Daesh militants were expelled in December 2016 from the coastal city of Sirte that had been their bastion in Libya.
Two old stretchers under an improvised tent, set up in front of the containers, serve as a laboratory for a forensic doctor.
“As you can see, we don’t have the means. This is where we took samples for DNA tests and where we photographed the corpses,” said Tuwaileb, who is in charge of the facility.
Due to the lack of resources, several hundred other militant corpses have been abandoned under the rubble in Sirte or in makeshift cemeteries dug by the radicals.
In the wake of the battle during which US-led coalition airstrikes backed Libyan security forces, decaying bodies on the streets of Sirte gave rise to fears of epidemic.
In a comment after an August visit that drew strong criticism, British Foreign Secretary Boris Johnson said the country could one day become a magnet for tourists and investors once it can “clear the dead bodies away.”
According to Tuwaileb’s estimate, between 1,500 and 2,000 militants were buried in the Mediterranean city.
“We don’t have enough fridges, or we would have exhumed all the bodies,” said the Libyan official, who pointed out that the containers were loaned by private companies.
Out of the seven refrigerated containers in Misrata, three have broken down. “We’ve had to redistribute the bodies among the fridges that still work,” said Tuwaileb.

But he said it has been a struggle, especially during the North African summer and constant power cuts. “So a backup has to be ready and we have to refuel it regularly,” he said.
Opening one of the containers released a thick cloud of vapor that reeked of dead bodies and expanded on contact with the warm air outside.
Inside, white body bags smudged with blood and mud lay on metal shelves.
“The bags are numbered and classified. Each body has its own file, DNA sample... documents or other signs collected with each body,” said Tuwaileb.
In January, 60 more bodies were added to the collection, of radicals killed in airstrikes south of Sirte in which Washington said its stealth B-2 bombers fired some 100 laser-guided missiles.
Tuwaileb said all the files have been transferred to the prosecutor general’s office in Tripoli to decide if and where the bodies are to be buried.
Based on documents found on the bodies, most the dead militants came from Tunisia, Egypt and Sudan, with some from Libya, but no families have come to Misrata to claim them.
“We don’t know if countries have contacted the prosecutor general to recover the bodies of their nationals, but as far as we’re concerned nobody’s come here to try to identify the bodies,” said Tuwaileb.
The prosecutor’s office, contacted several times by AFP, declined to comment on the case.
“In the meantime, the bodies will stay here. The problem is that some of the companies who lent out the refrigerated containers want them back,” he said.
“Every time I tell them they can take the fridges if they want, but with the contents.”


Somali president visits city claimed by breakaway region

Updated 17 January 2026
Follow

Somali president visits city claimed by breakaway region

MOGADISHU: Somali President Hassan Sheikh Mohamud on Friday visited a provincial capital claimed by the breakaway region of Somaliland -- the first visit there by a sitting president in over 40 years.
The visit to Las Anod, the administrative capital of the Sool region, comes amid heightened diplomatic tensions in the Horn of Africa after Israel officially recognised Somaliland, drawing strong opposition from Mogadishu.
Mohamud was attending the inauguration of the president of the newly created Northeast State, which became Somalia's sixth federal state in August.
It was the first visit by a Somali president since 1984.
Somalia is a federation of semi-autonomous states, some of which have fraught relations with the central government in Mogadishu.
The Northeast State comprises the regions of Sool, Sanaag and Cayn, all territories Somaliland claims as integral to its borders.
Somaliland had controlled Las Anod since 2007 but was forced to withdraw in 2023 after violent clashes with Somali forces and pro-Mogadishu militias left scores dead.
Mohamud's visit "is a symbol of strengthening the unity and efforts of the federal government to enforce the territorial unity of the Somali country and its people", the Somali president's office said.