...  their job is that much harder because the perpetrators have done 
everything to conceal the extent of war crimes.  ...

 

[ Sounds more apropos to Germany's WWII allies over there. ]

 

 

http://www.dw-world.de/dw/article/0,,5779122,00.html

 

German researchers help identify Srebrenica victims with DNA analysis 

 

 <http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,5779122,00.html> Großansicht des 
Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift: These graves mark the known victims of the 
Srebenica massacre, but many more have yet to be identified

 

 


A German company pioneered the technology used to match up DNA fragments and 
they now collaborate with the International Committee on Missing Persons in 
Sarajevo to identify war crimes victims in Srebenica.


 

On July 11, 1995, Bosnia experienced the largest widespread killings and other 
war crimes in Europe since World War II. 

 

United Nations authorities say that in a span of just a few days, Serb 
separatists killed about 8,500 Bosniaks and buried their bodies in mass graves 
near Srebrenica. However, today, many victims of the war crimes have still not 
been identified. 

 

Since 2006, the International Committee on Missing Persons (ICMP) has used DNA 
analysis to link bone fragments and other organic material buried in Bosnia's 
mass graves with the DNA of potential relatives who have donated their genetic 
material to be matched up with the victims.

 

Qiagen, a German company based in Hilden outside Dusseldorf in western Germany, 
has been conducting much of the biological and genetic testing.

 

"There are quite a number of difficulties, especially in the extraction of 
older bones, which have been buried in the ground for years under very adverse 
conditions," said scientist Mario Scherer, who works on samples from Bosnia.

 

"The quality of the genetic material in these bones is impaired by chemical and 
physical agents and processes through decomposition by bacteria very strongly," 
he added. "The aim is to extract the genetic material as cleanly as possible."

 

Bildunterschrift:  
<http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,5779122_ind_1,00.html> Großansicht 
des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  Identification brings closure for the 
victims' relatives

 

Scherer works mostly with his centrifuge, a blue, futuristic-looking cube just 
larger than a microwave oven. It sits on Scherer's laboratory bench and he puts 
his samples inside, where the biological material can be separated after being 
spun around at high speed.

 

The genetic material is cleaned with so-called pillars, or plastic tubes filled 
with a material that binds to the genetic molecules and separates them from 
interfering substances.

 

Forensics new territory for German firm

 

Initially, Qiagen's scientists thought that their centrifuge would mainly be 
used to analyze simple DNA sources, such as blood samples.

 

But it soon became clear that the blue cube could also read more problematic 
samples of genetic molecules, even from bones that have been buried for many 
years.

 

Other scientists working in this field agree that special precautions must be 
taken even from the moment of extraction from the field. 

 

"We also must make sure that no additional external contamination is acquired 
during the process," said Thomas Parsons, the director of forensic science at 
the International Commission on Missing Persons, in a 2006 interview on 
Qiagen's website.

 

"The small amounts of DNA that we are working with can reach the levels of PCR 
(detection of polymerase chain reaction) technology, so it is easy to pick up 
any exogenous contamination that may be present," he added. 

 

DNA identification is crucial

 

Bildunterschrift:  
<http://www.dw-world.de/popups/popup_lupe/0,,5779122_ind_2,00.html> Großansicht 
des Bildes mit der Bildunterschrift:  DNA analysis is the only possibility for 
identifying the victims, say experts

 

Parsons' colleagues from ICMP use Qiagen's techniques to extract genetic 
molecules from bones that have been buried for 15 years.

 

"DNA is really the only mode for identification," said Rene Huel, the head of 
the IPMC laboratory in Sarajevo. "Other, more traditional ways of 
identification could not be applied here in this region."

 

After the war in Bosnia, many thousands of people are still unaccounted for. 
Many bones discovered in mass graves could not initially be identified. There 
are hundreds of bags of bones in cold storage, which are still waiting to be 
examined. 

 

Huel added that their job is that much harder because the perpetrators have 
done everything to conceal the extent of war crimes.

 

"You do not have one individual in one grave site," he said. "You may have one 
individual in four or five grave sites. We try to bring back as much of the 
body as possible. To bring back the missing person to the family is one of the 
big challenges we face."

 

Scientists are able to find DNA fragments from the pieces of bone buried around 
Bosnia. Then, they can compare that with the results of DNA from possible 
relatives in the region who have agreed to provide blood samples.

 

Since work began, the ICMP has been able to describe the fate of more than 
15,000 missing people. During the past 12 months alone, 775 more victims have 
been identified. The scientists have informed their living relatives so that 
they can be buried on the anniversary of the Srebrenica massacre.

 

"Hopefully we will have an impact on a greater world," Huel said. "People will 
realize that these crimes or what they are committing hidden will not be 
hidden. This type of DNA technology can tell the truth about what has happened."

 

Author: Judith Hartl / Cyrus Farivar

Editor: Kate Bowen 

 

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