Security Council ‘confident’ of cooperation on fate of missing Kuwaitis in Iraq
Welcoming the Iraqi Government’s constructive engagement in the ongoing inquiry into the fate of Kuwaitis who went
missing in Iraq after the 1990 invasion of their country, the United Nations Security Council today expressed confidence
that the parties involved would work to ensure that all outstanding issues were satisfactorily addressed.
The Council had earlier been briefed on Secretary-General Kofi Annan’s latest report dealing with Kuwaiti prisoners of
war and third-party nationals in which he said that out of a total of 605 cases, the number of remains identified has
reached 227.
“Council members expressed the deepest condolences to the all families of those missing persons that had now been
identified. [They] also expressed their continuing concern for the plight of the families of those persons whose
whereabouts are still unknown,” Ambassador Kenzo Oshima of Japan, which holds the Council’s presidency for the month of
August, told reporters.
The members of the Council shared the views expressed in that report, where Mr. Annan expressed the hope that with the
expanding activities of Kuwaiti investigative teams and increased cooperation by the new Iraqi authorities, more human
remains will eventually be brought to Kuwait and more missing persons files can be closed.
The Council also reiterated Mr. Annan’s strong condemnation of the execution of Kuwaiti and third country nationals by
the previous Iraqi regime. "This killing and the decade-long cover-up of the truth constitute a grave violation of human
rights and international humanitarian law," Mr. Annan said, stressing that those responsible for those crimes, in
particular those who ordered the executions, must be brought to justice.