Remains of 30 people believed killed by Daesh militants found in Syria in a search by Qatar and FBI

FILE - Diane Foley, right, mother of James Foley, who was kidnapped and beheaded by Daesh militants in 2014 while reporting on the conflict in Syria, speaks outside the White House in Washington, Wednesday, May 3, 2023, asking the Biden administration to help free hostages and detainees. (AP)
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Updated 12 May 2025
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Remains of 30 people believed killed by Daesh militants found in Syria in a search by Qatar and FBI

  • The search took place in the town of Dabiq, near Syria’s northern border with Turkiye

DAMASCUS: The remains of 30 people believed to have been killed by the militant Daesh group have been found in a remote Syrian town in a search led by Qatari search teams and the FBI, according to a statement from Qatar on Monday.
The Qatari internal security forces said the FBI had requested the search, and that DNA tests are currently underway to determine the identities of the people. The Qatari agency did not whom the American intelligence and security agency is trying to find.
Dozens of foreigners, including aid workers and journalists, were killed by Daesh militants who had controlled large swaths of Syria and Iraq for half a decade and declared a so-called caliphate. The militant group lost most of its territory in late 2017 and was declared defeated in 2019.
Since then, dozens of gravesites and mass graves have been discovered in northern Syria containing remains and bodies of people Daesh had abducted over the years.
American journalists James Foley and Steven Sotloff, as well as humanitarian workers Kayla Mueller and Peter Kassig are among those killed by Daesh.
John Cantlie, a British correspondent, was abducted alongside Foley in 2012, and was last seen alive in one of the extremist group’s propaganda videos in 2016.
The search took place in the town of Dabiq, near Syria’s northern border with Turkiye.
Mass graves have also found in areas previously controlled by Syrian President Bashar Assad who was ousted in a lightning insurgency last December, ending his family’s half-century rule. For years, the Assads used their notorious security and intelligence agencies to crack down on dissidents, many who have gone missing.
The United Nations in 2021 estimated that over 130,000 Syrians were taken away and disappeared during the uprising that began in 2011 and descended into a 13-year civil war.


13 perish in highway bus crash in central Iran

Updated 6 sec ago
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13 perish in highway bus crash in central Iran

  • Eleven bus passengers and two people who were in the taxi were killed in the crash, while six women and seven men were hospitalized, IRNA said

TEHRAN: A passenger bus overturned, killing 13 people and injuring over a dozen others on a highway in central Iran, state-run IRNA news agency reported.
The bus was traveling late Monday from Isfahan to the northeastern city of Mashhad when it struck the highway’s central guardrail, crossed into the opposite lane and collided with a taxi before flipping over, police said.
Eleven bus passengers and two people who were in the taxi were killed in the crash, while six women and seven men were hospitalized, IRNA said.
Emergency teams, including ambulances and rescue units, were dispatched to the site shortly after the crash.
Iran has one of the world’s worst traffic safety records, with some 20,000 deaths annually.