This article is from the source 'guardian' and was first published or seen on . It last changed over 40 days ago and won't be checked again for changes.

You can find the current article at its original source at http://www.theguardian.com/world/2016/feb/26/investigators-exhume-nameless-dead-colombia-civil-war

The article has changed 3 times. There is an RSS feed of changes available.

Version 0 Version 1
Investigators exhume the nameless dead of Colombia's half-century-long civil war Investigators exhume the nameless dead of Colombia's half-century-long civil war
(about 1 hour later)
The stench of death envelops the makeshift morgue as Diego Casallas uses a box cutter to slash open a mud-caked body bag. The unidentified remains are all but decomposed after more than a decade in the ground, but there are valuable clues: a pair of brown work boots and a camouflaged backpack.The stench of death envelops the makeshift morgue as Diego Casallas uses a box cutter to slash open a mud-caked body bag. The unidentified remains are all but decomposed after more than a decade in the ground, but there are valuable clues: a pair of brown work boots and a camouflaged backpack.
“These are objects that can lead to an eventual identification,” says Casallas, a forensic anthropologist, as he calmly inspects a femur bone with the cold detachment required of his profession.“These are objects that can lead to an eventual identification,” says Casallas, a forensic anthropologist, as he calmly inspects a femur bone with the cold detachment required of his profession.
Related: Colombia peace deal with Farc is hailed as new model for ending conflictsRelated: Colombia peace deal with Farc is hailed as new model for ending conflicts
As a deal to end Colombia’s half-century-long conflict nears, this lonely cemetery in a former rebel stronghold has become a hive of activity. The past two weeks, criminal investigators have been digging up the dead in hopes of identifying 464 people buried in unmarked paupers’ graves. So far, they have disinterred 66.As a deal to end Colombia’s half-century-long conflict nears, this lonely cemetery in a former rebel stronghold has become a hive of activity. The past two weeks, criminal investigators have been digging up the dead in hopes of identifying 464 people buried in unmarked paupers’ graves. So far, they have disinterred 66.
It’s slow work. Every exhumation is documented by forensic anthropologists, topographers and crime scene photographers under the supervision of a prosecutor before samples can be sent to Bogotá for DNA analysis, and hopefully, a match with an expanding genetic database of thousands of Colombians whose loved ones disappeared during decades of fighting.It’s slow work. Every exhumation is documented by forensic anthropologists, topographers and crime scene photographers under the supervision of a prosecutor before samples can be sent to Bogotá for DNA analysis, and hopefully, a match with an expanding genetic database of thousands of Colombians whose loved ones disappeared during decades of fighting.
If the detective work succeeds on a large enough scale, it could go a long way to help Colombians heal from the bloodshed and regain confidence in the rule of law.If the detective work succeeds on a large enough scale, it could go a long way to help Colombians heal from the bloodshed and regain confidence in the rule of law.
In October, as part of a breakthrough in three-year-old peace talks, government negotiators and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) agreed to establish a high-level agency to search for the bodies of the estimated 45,000 people who were believed to have been slain by one side or the other and whose bodies were discarded without record during the conflict. An additional 220,000 people are confirmed to have been killed. In October, as part of a breakthrough in three-year-old peace talks, government negotiators and the Revolutionary Armed Forces of Colombia (Farc) agreed to establish a high-level agency to search for the bodies of the estimated 45,000 people who were believed to have been killed by one side or the other and whose bodies were discarded without record during the conflict. An additional 220,000 people are confirmed to have been killed.
Authorities for now are concentrating the search in the Sierra de la Macarena, a wild, Taiwan-sized region long disputed by government troops and the Farc.Authorities for now are concentrating the search in the Sierra de la Macarena, a wild, Taiwan-sized region long disputed by government troops and the Farc.
Related: Colombia speeds up move to identify 28,000 bodies found dumped in unmarked gravesRelated: Colombia speeds up move to identify 28,000 bodies found dumped in unmarked graves
Human rights groups applaud the effort but say the scope of Colombia’s bloodletting requires more resources. Casallas is one of just two dozen forensic anthropologists employed by the chief prosecutor’s office, whose job it is to sift through more than 21,000 unmarked tombs and graves nationwide containing so-called NNs, or no names, the term used to describe the anonymous dead.Human rights groups applaud the effort but say the scope of Colombia’s bloodletting requires more resources. Casallas is one of just two dozen forensic anthropologists employed by the chief prosecutor’s office, whose job it is to sift through more than 21,000 unmarked tombs and graves nationwide containing so-called NNs, or no names, the term used to describe the anonymous dead.
“If we keep going at the current pace, Colombia is going to be looking for our disappeared for at least the next three generations,” said Pablo Cala, an activist who has helped authorities hand over to their families the remains of 108 victims of the 2,292 people buried anonymously in the Macarena region.“If we keep going at the current pace, Colombia is going to be looking for our disappeared for at least the next three generations,” said Pablo Cala, an activist who has helped authorities hand over to their families the remains of 108 victims of the 2,292 people buried anonymously in the Macarena region.
The cemetery in La Macarena has long been a symbol for leftist critics of the government. Its location, a few feet downslope from a military base belonging to the elite Omega Task Force, one of the largest recipients of US counterinsurgency aid, fuelled tales that it held untold numbers of civilians killed by the military and dressed up as guerrillas to hide human rights abuses. Colombian media took to calling it the world’s largest mass grave.The cemetery in La Macarena has long been a symbol for leftist critics of the government. Its location, a few feet downslope from a military base belonging to the elite Omega Task Force, one of the largest recipients of US counterinsurgency aid, fuelled tales that it held untold numbers of civilians killed by the military and dressed up as guerrillas to hide human rights abuses. Colombian media took to calling it the world’s largest mass grave.
At the current pace, Colombia is going to be looking for our disappeared for at least the next three generationsAt the current pace, Colombia is going to be looking for our disappeared for at least the next three generations
It is unknown how many of the dead were civilians. In a fatal omission that speaks to longstanding institutionalised neglect and corruption in Colombia, authorities at the time made almost no effort to identify the dead or investigate how they were killed.It is unknown how many of the dead were civilians. In a fatal omission that speaks to longstanding institutionalised neglect and corruption in Colombia, authorities at the time made almost no effort to identify the dead or investigate how they were killed.
Such distinctions matter little to Jesús Antonio Hernández, who for three decades was the village’s gravedigger. During the worst of the bloodbath starting in 2002, after earlier peace efforts broke down and the government launched a major offensive, helicopters would unload as many as 10 corpses a day on the base’s airstrip, which is the dusty jungle crossroads’ only paved surface.Such distinctions matter little to Jesús Antonio Hernández, who for three decades was the village’s gravedigger. During the worst of the bloodbath starting in 2002, after earlier peace efforts broke down and the government launched a major offensive, helicopters would unload as many as 10 corpses a day on the base’s airstrip, which is the dusty jungle crossroads’ only paved surface.
“It was very sad,” Hernández said, wiping away sweat as he wielded a spade helping undo his burial work. “People were buried without their loved ones. I just put them in a bag and interred them.”“It was very sad,” Hernández said, wiping away sweat as he wielded a spade helping undo his burial work. “People were buried without their loved ones. I just put them in a bag and interred them.”
While Hernández took great care to dig individual plots, he said the closest they ever got to a proper burial was a visit years later by a Roman Catholic priest who delivered a prayer for the dead. He left the town himself three years ago, fleeing what he said were death threats by rebels who accused him of helping authorities cover up abuses. But he returned temporarily to assist in the investigation.While Hernández took great care to dig individual plots, he said the closest they ever got to a proper burial was a visit years later by a Roman Catholic priest who delivered a prayer for the dead. He left the town himself three years ago, fleeing what he said were death threats by rebels who accused him of helping authorities cover up abuses. But he returned temporarily to assist in the investigation.
With the guerrillas in retreat, the village of 6,000 people is much safer now, but not everyone wants to dig up the past.With the guerrillas in retreat, the village of 6,000 people is much safer now, but not everyone wants to dig up the past.
Residents whose families have lived for generations in brightly painted shacks adjacent to the cemetery say they want nothing to do with the investigation and the conservative mayor is concerned that negative media attention will deflate a nascent tourist boom driven by the town’s proximity to the spectacular Caño Cristales, a moss-covered river that resembles a floating rainbow when in full bloom.Residents whose families have lived for generations in brightly painted shacks adjacent to the cemetery say they want nothing to do with the investigation and the conservative mayor is concerned that negative media attention will deflate a nascent tourist boom driven by the town’s proximity to the spectacular Caño Cristales, a moss-covered river that resembles a floating rainbow when in full bloom.
Ramón Castro, one of the few residents who don’t shy away from talking about the past, said many families allowed themselves to be corrupted by the Farc, selling them coca used to make cocaine and even encouraging their children to enlist in exchange for the rebels’ money.Ramón Castro, one of the few residents who don’t shy away from talking about the past, said many families allowed themselves to be corrupted by the Farc, selling them coca used to make cocaine and even encouraging their children to enlist in exchange for the rebels’ money.
But he said that living in a heavily militarised zone, they also came to mistrust the armed forces, to the point that one mother he knows avoided reclaiming her son’s body for fear of being labelled a guerrilla sympathiser and putting at risk the lives of her other children.But he said that living in a heavily militarised zone, they also came to mistrust the armed forces, to the point that one mother he knows avoided reclaiming her son’s body for fear of being labelled a guerrilla sympathiser and putting at risk the lives of her other children.
In an isolated area where justice has long been served at the barrel of a gun, nobody puts much faith in a deal to end the fighting, he added.In an isolated area where justice has long been served at the barrel of a gun, nobody puts much faith in a deal to end the fighting, he added.
“If you ask anyone here about peace they just laugh,” Castro said.“If you ask anyone here about peace they just laugh,” Castro said.