Shocking confession from the gravestone that buried the members of 300 deaths in Somalia (Photo)

Mohammed Hassan is a tombstone of Barakat's cemetery located on the outskirts of the Somali capital, Mogadishu. Hasan, 50, describes the difficulty of burying members of people who had suffered as a result of a Saturday explosion in Mogadishu that left at least 300 people dead. [...]
Hasan, 50, describes the difficulty of burying members of people where they had suffered as a result of a Saturday explosion in Mogadishu that left at least 300 more dead than 300 injured and 100 others still missing, reports “Alzeera”, the Periscope broadcast.
The explosion at a busy intersection in the center of the city of Mogadishu was the deadliest in the history of the East African country.
We left the cemetery because there was no work. Tombs usually occur during the morning, and then I heard a very loud explosion”, relate the undertaker. There was no work to do that morning because there was no death. Normally we bury one person a day”.
But because of the noise of the explosion, we knew we'd be busy, it was like an earthquake, but very loud, we all got back to work and started preparing new graves, usually when something happens, we don't expect their relatives to ask us to dig the grave. When people come, we already have one or two graves”.
When the explosion occurred, the bodies began to arrive. The blast occurred on Saturday afternoon and took our first body at about 6am on Sunday. ”
I remember very clearly, the corpse had no head and there was a missing hand, it looked like it was an old man. ”
Asked by “journalist Al Jazeera” How he recognizes disabled bodies that have no head, he answers:
I buried 17 people myself, some had body parts wrapped in a rag. I've worked as a undertaker for eight years and I've never seen anything like it, I've lived in Mogadis, all my life, and even during the civil war it wasn't worse than this. I'm 50 years old, and that's the worst I've ever faced so far”.
My colleagues have said the same. I don't know how many people have managed to bury you, but we've been working over and over since Saturday afternoon.”/Periscopi/














