TIME Magazineさんのインスタグラム写真 - (TIME MagazineInstagram)「Walid Khalil Murad prays and kisses a shrine to his family that hangs on a wall of his home in Theley, southern #Germany, on July 25. Murad owned two shops in the Iraqi city of Sinjar before ISIS forced his #family to flee. In 2015, their smuggler’s boat went beneath the waves with his wife and three children trapped in the cabin. Many obstacles stand between Murad, 34, and the truth. After years of lobbying, an international organization has persuaded some countries to start work on identifying the dead using DNA #technology—and finally giving their families some form of closure. In these politically-volatile times, when nationalist parties have made inroads across #Europe, the International Commission on Missing Persons’s task is even more difficult. The countries that have found #migrant bodies on their soil would, in theory, take DNA samples and any other identifying characteristics and upload this information to a centralized database maintained by the ICMP. Meanwhile, anyone searching for a missing relative would fill in a form and give a DNA sample using a simple saliva or pin-prick blood test that can be done at home. The results are uploaded to a second database, and the two data sets are then compared for matches. But none of this will happen without the full support of the governments involved. For relatives of the dead like Murad, the political hostility and lack of empathy shown by countries like Italy feels like yet another indignity. “I want you to put yourself in my place, not for a day, just for one minute," Murad says. "Just imagine that you lost your family the same way I lost my family." Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @mustafahabdulaziz for TIME」8月27日 22時55分 - time

TIME Magazineのインスタグラム(time) - 8月27日 22時55分


Walid Khalil Murad prays and kisses a shrine to his family that hangs on a wall of his home in Theley, southern #Germany, on July 25. Murad owned two shops in the Iraqi city of Sinjar before ISIS forced his #family to flee. In 2015, their smuggler’s boat went beneath the waves with his wife and three children trapped in the cabin. Many obstacles stand between Murad, 34, and the truth. After years of lobbying, an international organization has persuaded some countries to start work on identifying the dead using DNA #technology—and finally giving their families some form of closure. In these politically-volatile times, when nationalist parties have made inroads across #Europe, the International Commission on Missing Persons’s task is even more difficult. The countries that have found #migrant bodies on their soil would, in theory, take DNA samples and any other identifying characteristics and upload this information to a centralized database maintained by the ICMP. Meanwhile, anyone searching for a missing relative would fill in a form and give a DNA sample using a simple saliva or pin-prick blood test that can be done at home. The results are uploaded to a second database, and the two data sets are then compared for matches. But none of this will happen without the full support of the governments involved. For relatives of the dead like Murad, the political hostility and lack of empathy shown by countries like Italy feels like yet another indignity. “I want you to put yourself in my place, not for a day, just for one minute," Murad says. "Just imagine that you lost your family the same way I lost my family." Read more at the link in bio. Photograph by @mustafahabdulaziz for TIME


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