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May 26, 2026
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Gaza's Cemetery of the Missing: Unidentified Bodies Buried with Numbers

AI Summary
In Gaza, a cemetery for the missing has been established to bury unidentified bodies recovered from the war-torn region. Families like Lina al-Assi's are searching for their loved ones, but the lack of DNA facilities and identification protocols makes it difficult.

The Plight of Gaza's Missing

In the Gaza Strip, a cemetery for the missing has been established to bury unidentified bodies recovered from the war-torn region. Lina al-Assi, a 26-year-old mother of two, visits an unmarked grave in the Deir el-Balah cemetery, hoping it might be her husband Jihad Tafesh's final resting place. He went missing on October 8, 2023, during Israel's war on Gaza.

The Cemetery of the Missing

The Deir el-Balah cemetery, locally known as the 'cemetery of the missing' or 'numbered graves cemetery,' was established in October 2025 as an emergency response to the growing number of unidentified bodies. The cemetery contains around 1,400 graves, with approximately 350 remaining unused.

Challenges in Identification

The identification process is complicated by the lack of DNA analysis facilities in Gaza. Bodies are transferred from the Red Cross to Gaza's main hospitals, where forensic teams photograph the bodies, collect samples, and preserve belongings or distinguishing marks. However, without functioning laboratories, genetic testing or matching samples with families of the missing is not possible.

A Growing Humanitarian Crisis

The continued absence of DNA facilities and delays in identification are deepening the humanitarian and psychological crisis for families of the missing. Ziad Obaid, head of the cemeteries department at Gaza's Ministry of Religious Endowments, calls for international pressure to enable proper forensic testing or the transfer of samples abroad.

A Family's Quest for Closure

Lina al-Assi's story is just one of many. She spent over two weeks searching for her husband at the hospital, but was unable to confirm his identity before he was buried. Her desire is simple: 'All I want is for my husband to have a grave with a name, so I can visit him with my children whenever we want.'