CYPRUS MISSING (LIVESAY/MARTELLI) -- PBS NHWE SAT. DEC. 2, 2017
CYPRUS, AN ISLAND IN THE EASTERN PART OF THE
MEDITERRANEAN SEA, IS A FORMER BRITISH COLONY THAT GAINED ITS INDEPENDENCE IN
1960, BUT HAS BEEN DIVIDED SINCE THE MID-1970’S...WHEN WAR BROKE OUT BETWEEN
THE ISLAND’S TWO MAIN ETHNIC GROUPS -- GREEK AND TURKISH CYPRIOTS. IT’S A
CONFLICT THAT AT TIMES HAS BROUGHT TWO NATO MEMBERS -- GREECE AND TURKEY
-- TO THE BRINK OF WAR. THIS SUMMER (JULY) REUNIFICATION TALKS COLLAPSED,
THERE WON’T BE FURTHER TALKS UNTIL AFTER ELECTIONS EARLY NEXT YEAR. ONE
HOPEFUL SPOT FOR RECONCILIATION IN CYPRUS IS THE SENSITIVE WORK BEING DONE BY A
COMMUNAL GROUP OF SCIENTISTS. NEWSHOUR WEEKEND’S CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY HAS THE
STORY.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Since 1974, Cyprus has been a country divided between the
ethnically Greek south and Turkish north. Even today one of the most painful
aspects of the war that split the country in two is the fate of the hundreds of
people on both sides who disappeared in the violence decades ago and were never
found.
FLORIAN VON KOENIG: This is our anthropological laboratory.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: That’s where Florian von Koenig and his team come in.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: These are remains of how many people?
FLORIAN VON KOENIG: 30 plus remains on the tables.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Von Koenig is the United Nations’ Permanent Secretary to the
Committee on Missing Persons in Cyprus. Its mission is to find and identify the
remains of those missing brothers, sons, and fathers -- more than 2,000 people
in all -- from the very old to the very young.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: This was an infant. Approximately how old?
ISTENC ENGIN: Three to six months.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Three to six months.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: The trauma on the right hip. The Committee on Missing Persons does
not attempt to assign blame or establish the cause of death, although sometimes
it’s obvious.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: So the hip was broken?
ISTENC ENGIN: Yes. And we are thinking it was a gunshot wound.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: There was a gunshot wound here, a probable gunshot wound.
The Committee is using science to bring closure
to families of the missing and possibly bring the country closer to
reunification. The process starts when investigators, often retired police
officers, get a tip about a possible secret, unmarked burial site. They call archeologists
to start digging -- nine teams equally divided between Greek and Turkish
Cypriots. Sometimes they find the remains of one body; other times, the
remains of many in a mass grave.
FLORIAN VON KOENIG: The more complicated things are graves like these. You have no
idea how many people are here. We’ve had graves where we’ve found basically
only small finger bones and knee caps and they turned out to belong to 68
people.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Remains are brought here to labs in the neutral, United Nations-controlled
Green Zone in Cyprus to be cleaned and organized so identification can begin.
It’s a process that can take months.
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU: The remains come here with chain of custody and with archeological
reports and recovery logs, so they show us what was exhumed in each burial.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Including belongings, clothing?
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU: Exactly. Including non-biological artifacts.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: So that includes in this case the soles of shoes, a house key?
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU: Exactly.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Some spare change.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Personal items, like rings, can be clues to identifying the
victims. The lab also relies on victims’ dental records and DNA...to compare
with samples donated by relatives of the missing. The lab staff is a reflection
of the island’s political division and personal loss. Greek Cypriot Theodora
Eleftheriou and Turkish Cypriot Emine Cetinsel both have missing relatives. Two
years ago, Cetinsel discovered one of the skeletons she was analyzing belonged
to her own grandfather.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: So you found your own grandfather’s remains by chance?
EMINE CETINSEL: Yes, because we work blindly. I mean, we don’t know who they are,
and once the DNA results came, it was my grandfather.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: So this is your grandfather?
EMINE CETINSEL: Yes. And he was 34 years old when he got missing.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Her grandfather was a Turkish Cypriot civil servant who
disappeared on his way home from work at a time of heightened tensions before
the 1974 war. His body, found more than 50 years later, showed signs of
multiple gunshot wounds.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Was it emotional?
EMINE CETINSEL: Not while I was analyzing. After I found out that it is him, the
emotional part was to tell my parents about it.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: What was that like?
EMINE CETINSEL: They were finally happy that he was found and final acceptance
that he is actually dead.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: It’s one of the most important parts of the process – reuniting
families with the remains of their loved ones, so they can have a proper
burial, whether it be Christian or Muslim or non-religious. Since 2006, the
Committee has identified 847 people -- fewer than half of the missing. And the
work being done here could help families in other conflicts around the world.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: How cutting edge is the work that you’re doing?
FLORIAN VON KOENIG: So, right now, we are, I believe, the biggest lab in the world
that deals with skeletal remains of missing persons and does the
anthropological analysis on it. We’ve started to train others. We focus on the
Middle East region, so we’ve trained scientists from Iraq, where there are more
than 500,000 people missing. We have trained scientists from Lebanon. We’ll
soon will be training Syrians. There is a lot of interest, because the
expertise you see here is very, very specific.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: These Cypriots know their work will never be complete.
CHRIS LIVESAY: Do you think you will recover all of them?
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU: No. We know that we will not, because we know that many burials
are already under roads, under buildings. So, okay, the committee tries to do
the best, but we know that some remains are lost forever.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Nevertheless, they are not giving up.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: Is this a healthy process for a country that’s trying to reunify,
or does it actually have a negative effect sometimes?
FLORIAN VON KOENIG: No. We strongly believe we, in a number of ways, we contribute to
reconciliation, or we remove an obstacle to reconciliation, because there are
thousands of families that are directly or indirectly affected, and case by
case we allow families to find closure.
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY: So, you are not just putting the bodies back together, you are
putting the country back together?
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU: That’s how we feel here and that’s why we are proud about our
work.
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|
TIMECODE |
LOWER
THIRD |
1 |
1:24 |
(COURTESY) COMMITTEE
ON MISSING PERSONS IN CYPRUS |
2 |
1:49 |
FLORIAN VON KOENIG THE COMMITTEE ON MISSING PERSONS IN CYPRUS |
3 |
2:09 |
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGIST |
4 |
3:01 |
CHRISTOPHER LIVESAY SPECIAL CORRESPONDENT |
5 |
3:08 |
EMINE CETINSEL FORENSIC SCIENTIST |
6 |
4:21 |
FLORIAN VON KOENIG THE COMMITTEE ON MISSING PERSONS IN CYPRUS |
7 |
4:58 |
THEODORA ELEFTHERIOU FORENSIC ANTHROPOLOGIST |
8 |
5:14 |
(COURTESY) COMMITTEE
ON MISSING PERSONS IN CYPRUS |