Khthon documents mass graves, atrocity crimes, and forensic evidence from conflict zones worldwide. Our work is strictly humanitarian and apolitical.
This site may contain imagery and descriptions of deceased individuals, violent injuries, and human remains gathered in the course of active investigations. Content is presented for accountability and documentation purposes only.
Khthon documents mass graves, atrocity crimes, and forensic evidence from conflict zones worldwide. Our work is strictly humanitarian and apolitical.
This site may contain imagery and descriptions of deceased individuals, violent injuries, and human remains gathered in the course of active investigations.
Country / Region Overview
The 1992–1995 Bosnian War left behind one of the most thoroughly documented networks of mass graves in the modern era.
The Srebrenica genocide of July 1995 saw over 8,000 Bosniak men and boys executed by Bosnian Serb forces, many buried in primary pits before being exhumed and reburied in secondary and tertiary graves to conceal the killings. Across eastern Bosnia, hundreds of grave sites are linked to ethnic cleansing campaigns, detentions, and battlefield massacres. These graves are notable for their concealment strategies: mechanical diggers creating large trenches, followed by re-excavation to disperse bodies, leaving fragmented skeletal remains across multiple sites.
"Bosnia remains a global reference case where graves were used not only for concealment but also as evidence that anchored convictions for genocide and crimes against humanity."
— Khthon Field Assessment
Investigations into Bosnian mass graves became a cornerstone of international forensic practice. The International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia (ICTY), alongside the International Commission on Missing Persons (ICMP), pioneered DNA-based identification — linking remains across scattered graves to match secondary burials back to their primary sites. Coalition teams of forensic anthropologists, satellite analysts, and local witnesses continue to recover and identify victims nearly three decades later.
For Khthon, Bosnia demonstrates the importance of temporal satellite analysis to detect earth-moving associated with "secondary burials" — a practice mirrored in other conflicts. The ICMP's DNA database, the largest of its kind for a single conflict, remains a methodological reference for Khthon's identification framework. Bosnia is the defining example of how forensic science can serve accountability, and how graves themselves become evidence.
Browse Khthon's full catalogue of country and case reports across seven global regions, or get involved with our ongoing investigations.