Builders unearth human remains in Orsha
Construction workers in Orsha found many human bones while building
facilities in the city for this year's national end-of-harvest festival
Dazhynki. It is unclear who the buried people were and how they died.
Orsha-based journalist Andrey Hrableuski told ERB that workers have recently unearthed
20 skeletons on the former Soviet prison site.
"They found 20 skeletons exactly, forensic experts said so. No one
knows the remains of how many people had been discovered earlier," he
said.
Workers say they often unearth human bones and they are no longer
surprised by it. Under the law, prosecutors must launch a criminal
investigation if human remains are discovered.
Hrableuski says that investigators usually close criminal cases because
tests show that the people in question died more than 50 years ago. They say
that workers might have dug a former cemetery or a mass grave containing the
remains of people murdered by the Nazis.
Investigator Inesa Rahuleva of
the Orsha District Prosecutor's Office says the office does not keep record of
how many remains have been found. She said she inspected remains only once,
when 42 skeletons were discovered. "Experts said the remains were 50 and
more years old. It is not the Prosecutor's Office's business to find out were
they victims or not," she told ERB
Rahuleva said that
investigators found no objects that could help identify the remains or any archival
records about the grave.
Hrableuski says the people might have been executed by Josef Stalin's secret
police, NKVD. He met with relatives of some Orsha residents killed in the
1930s.
"I found people who have
papers indicating that their relatives had been executed by shooting in that
Orsha prison in the 1930s. They were exonerated later. It is quite possible
that these are the remains of their relatives."