Monday 29 October 2012

Missing persons event draws relatives of 23 missing people in Arkansas

When a decomposing body was pulled from between two barges on the Mississippi River in Mississippi County on April 19, 2003, investigators were left with few clues to determine its identity.

The barges had traveled from New Orleans, with a planned drop-off in Greenville, Miss., but no missing persons cases immediately matched with the body, which investigators could only determine was that of a white man between 30-60 years old.

One promising clue was dental work inscribed with a name: Thompson.

Several years later, after Chris Edwards began handling unidentified-remains cases for the state Crime Laboratory, attention turned back to the man between the barges and his dental work.

"We got lucky to have that name in there," Edwards said.

Edwards contacted dentists in New Orleans and Greenville to see if they had put the work in place, but he said many dentists no longer write names or numbers on dental work.

He also sent the body's mandible to the University of North Texas Health Science Center's Center for Human Identification in September 2009.

After the center obtained DNA from the bone, came "a waiting period," Edwards said.

On April 1, 2011, Edwards received notice that the remains had been identified by a family's DNA sample as that of an Illinois man named Roy Thompson.

But Edwards' goal is to put a name to all of the skeletons in his closet.

As the unidentified human remains and missing persons coordinator at the state Crime Laboratory, Edwards works to identify the bodies using personal objects, dental work and DNA.

According to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, a registry for such cases, Arkansas has recorded 119 unidentified persons since 1970.

Of those cases, only 12 have been closed.

In a small room in the basement of the state crime lab, about 80 of the unidentified bodies are stored in various sized cardboard boxes and plastic bags. Some are complete skeletons, others just a handful of bone fragments.

On a 10-foot-tall metal shelving unit, dozens of these boxes and bags are stacked, each marked with a case number and the year the remains were found.

Inside the containers, every body displays its own history: a jaw wired shut, a broken bone, capped teeth and other dental work.

And as the "straight John or Jane Doe" cases come in, about 10 a year, Edwards chips away at the total.

"The unidentified bodies, I'm not letting those go anywhere," Edwards said. "Those are going to stay until they get identified."

Edwards now has DNA samples on file for nearly all of the unidentified remains in the agency's bone room.

The remaining samples area waiting testing, part of a normal backlog at the UNT Center for Human Identification, said George W. Adams, the national director of operations for NamUs, at the center's Forensic Science Unit.

He said when working with robotics, which run batches of up to 90 samples at a time, a small backlog is needed so the batches are always full.

"We need to make everything as efficient as we can," Adams said. "The more efficient that we can become, the faster we can get the samples out and the more associations we can make."

He said the unit, which operates on grant funding and does not charge law enforcement for testing or expert testimony, is geared toward turning over samples as quickly as possible to move investigations forward.

"In law enforcement, every hour, every day that there's a delay in making an association or identification or getting a result means there's more investigative work going on and that's driving up the cost of operations," Adams said.

Edwards said the DNA work provided by the Center for Human Identification has breathed new life in some cases. He said while reviewing an unidentified body's file, he found scalp hair that he was able to send off to the lab.

In another case, where a hunter found a partial skull in a wooded area in Ozark in1985, DNA testing helped identify the man in 2010 by samples provided by his daughters.

"A single bone makes it very hard, even though I can send that bone off for DNA and get those results back," Edwards said. "If I don't get a hit, it'll stay in the unidentified database indefinitely until there is a hit."

With a lack of clues, he said, getting a family member's DNA into the NamUs system could provide the link to closing an unidentified person's case file.

Edwards has been working directly with law enforcement agencies since February 2011 to pursue the families of missing persons and obtain DNA samples for those cases.

He said he plans to hold several missing-persons events next year after the success of a similar event in August 2011.

Of the roughly 165 missing persons cases in the state at the time, Edwards said he had family contact information for 30. But family members of 23 missing persons came out and provided about 45 samples, which could provide a future match to an unidentified body.

"That's the main thing, is finding families who have missing loved ones and get their information, get them in, get their DNA and send it in to the database," Edwards said.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/f0575ea192e341b68be2ed4bf1d71ac2/AR--Unidentified-Remains-Arkansas

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The Unnamed of Calderon Leave Their Mark

Mexico • 24,102 people: the equivalent of half a football stadium or a medium-sized town is the approximate number of bodies that have gone to the grave at the end of the current administration. And most importantly, it is a highly conservative estimate. It does includes full records of Mexico's most violent states, such as Guerrero, Michoacan, Sinaloa and Tamaulipas.

Throughout the six years of Calderon's Presidency, thousands of bodies have been buried in obscurity. Several more bodies are added every week: They are migrants, innocents, homeless, homeless families, criminals, and victims of homicide. There are bones and bodily remains apparently unclaimed without owners, which are often buried and stacked in cemeteries across the country from the U.S. border to the Yucatan Peninsula. These faceless corpses are listed in official records only as NN. No Name.

Extensive research from Milenio, based on over 470 records requests filed with state forensic medical services, municipal governments and even with the administration of small local cemeteries, brings a rough sketch that outlines a national atlas of unidentified bodies.

Among the data emerging from the research are two parallel events: 1) some attorneys general do not want to reveal the numbers of unidentified dead under their power. And 2) the number of bodies sent to grave has climbed every year since the beginning of Calderon's term, on par with the number of executed criminals and victims killed in violence overall. On average, 10 bodies unclaimed name or have been buried daily.

So far, with the figures for 2012 still unfinished and updated only through August 2011, and September, 2011 starts a period in which the remains of more people were placed in public areas, without the benefit of a tombstone which completely ending the identification process: 4, 927 corpses never were claimed in that year, during which, coincidentally, it was the year with the highest number of executions linked to organized crime in all of Felipe Calderón's administration.

The picture painted by the obtained documents clearly shows that in some cities, like Juarez and Monterrey, and Celaya, many corpses were in state of abandonment that were left to he abilities of the cemetery to process.. Consequently, new ditches in cemeteries have had to be excavated. It is a scenario that is repeated across the Republic, with mass graves or cemeteries running out of space, they have begun to recycle their spaces, removing and discarding the remains of seven years old.

Some cities and states saw the number of unidentified -NNs (no-names) rapidly multiply. In Nayarit, the figures tripled in three years. In Baja California, they grew by 100 percent. In Torreón, they multiplied 10 times. In the port of Veracruz, there were over a thousand unidentified bodies in 2011. Durango, they went from having eight bodies buried without a name in 2006 jumped to 438 in 2011 (see graphic above).

Not only that. The lack of control in the management of unidentified remains in many government entities, but also this is found in many private entities as well, as evidenced by several of the responses in this process. The report which took more than three months in development and for which it was necessary to create a database from accumulated data with thousands of figures. But these are the ones that have been recovered: the missing may never be computed. Fifty municipalities have lost their files prior to 2008 and 2009 and many have lost records from the location of bodies which makes later further study, investigation and identification unlikely.

Some states, such as Michoacan, never recognized integrating a state-based data on unidentified bodies and have only just begun that process, although the violence has left thousands killed in that state. The Michoacan Attorney General can not answer how many bodies the medical examiner received in the administration. "No statistic has the" justified reliance.

"The information on unidentified bodies held by government which have entered the medical examiner is not located together in one place or well documented in a single organized relationship over the entire state." But the PGJE-Michoacán said they are already working to correct this deficiency.

Requests for transparency, which will be available for public consultation www.milenio.com not only gives an idea of the general situation of unidentified bodies, but shows different levels of progress in terms of transparency in the country and states.

To obtain the data, it was necessary to use emails and state portals (Infomex, Saimex, Guanajuato Unit), without neglecting numerous phone calls and liaison to Social Communication to correct "mistakes" such as file loss, illegible documents and pages offline for weeks.

A total of 479 petitions submitted under pseudonyms, some were answered but some 191-230 all went unanswered. That is, they were completely ignored by the authorities. Another 40 applications were rejected, declared missing or classified as confidential state security.

Many states and municipalities provided the information without delay, as the Federal District, Sonora, Chihuahua and Guanajuato, among others. Their municipalities administrations relations' prepared detailed statistics, held their forensic medical services and burial administrations open. In general, information was available in 25 of the 31 states and over 210 cities and towns.

It is these responses that arise the well disguised facts detailing how Mexico processes the nameless dead. For example, the bodies in Jalisco after taking a DNA sample are burned. The remaining ashes and a small jar with genetic material remain in niches, waiting for a possible identification. On the other hand, Monterrey is very precise: keeps track of pathological parts, ie limbs, organs retrieved from hospitals or in public. Some cities in Sonora to open their old graves of people who no longer have family and Pachuca records fetuses - aborted, or abandoned - among all the bodies sent to their graves.

But there is the other side. There are states that did their best not to reveal the number of unidentified bodies processed in forensic services. Despite repeated calls, it was impossible to locate any transparency in the Office of Tamaulipas and that agency spokesman, Ruben Dario, said flatly that "there is no such data anyway because there was a transition of government and we do not know what happened before. He went further: Tamaulipas does not collect corpses because "that is the job of the Attorney General."

Some states shaved their numbers or have calculation mistakes. The Attorney General of Sinaloa reported only a few bodies were sent in to their company of calculation. only 54 dead bodies from the mass graves in 2011, and 227 in the entire administration. But a simple review of the medical service page, where scanned images are stored for unclaimed bodies, puts skepticism and doubts on those numbers. Its database of unidentified, unclaimed deceased located a total of 332 people during the administration. 91 bodies in 2011 alone, double the figure reported via transparency-were left in the hands the coroner.

In other states requesting the information, it turned out to be a tangled process and impossible to fulfill. In states like Oaxaca it is asked to bring a printed card facilities its attorney. In Campeche and Chiapas no transparency or even reliable systems: its pages are several months out of service and don't support questions. Baja California Sur has not bothered to open a service at all yet.

The State of Mexico deserves mention. Data from corpses in mass graves were obtained by their municipalities and their central government, which put various obstacles to prevent the information was disclosed. While most municipalities mexiquenses data revealed their bodies were sent to the pit, the Attorney General made "mistakes" attaching files to the responses on its website. the unit promised responsible for its transparency, "It will be resolved quickly," but a month has passed.

Beyond the technical problems, there are the negatives. That was the case of the Attorney General from the Offices of Veracruz and Aguascalientes as well as the prosecution office in Yucatán. The first two entities classified data as confidential, all information relating to the number of bodies received and processed by their respective forensic services (although municipalities delivered their data promptly without any problem). The Yucatan, for instance declared itself incompetent to answer any questions because, they said, that is not within its powers to have the bodies.

With respect to Veracruz, the argument went thus far: they literally said that the permanence of government, its institutions and to the territorial integrity of the state "would be at risk" to be known such data, in addition it would "invade privacy" of the unknown corpses.

Milenio appealed to the Veracruz Institute of Access Information (LAVI) to review that decision convinced that there is no invasion of privacy of a body without identity. Also cited was one of the criteria of the Federal Institute of Access to Information statistics stating that, whatever their nature, is public.

In the end, the LAVI ruled in favor of this newspaper to consider their arguments and held that the argument of the Attorney Veracruz "lacked legal validity." So far, the PGJE has not complied with the mandate to disclose its files of unidentified bodies.

Despite that, some thirty Veracruz municipalities themselves provided the information requested. And it was this that allowed the construction of a map, incomplete but functional, on the situation of unidentified bodies and unclaimed in Veracruz. From this data it was revealed that the state has resorted to more graves. In total, six years so far and still waiting for the state figures that the attorney could generate, municipal administrations have documented burial of 5,245 people. The highest figure in the entire country.

24,102 people is the most concrete figure has been added under this methodology. And yet, it is a conservative figure. Beyond Monterrey, failed to ask the municipal level in violent entities such as Nuevo Leon-Guerrero much less, and the requests that were made to the municipalities of Sinaloa Infomex system disappeared by a "computer error" that two months later, has not been corrected by the State Commission on Access to Public Information. There were lost data from Culiacán, Badiraguato, Mazatlan and Los Mochis that, most likely, it would have increased the number of NNs (no names).

Monday 29 October 2012

http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2012/10/the-unnamed-of-calderon-leave-their-mark.html

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Powerful storm kills at least 30 in Philippines, Vietnam

As Hurricane Sandy lashes the East Coast of the United States with wind and rain, Southeast Asia is dealing with the trail of death and damage from a powerful storm that has killed at least 30 people in the region over the past few days.

Tropical Storm Son-Tinh was moving northeast along the northern Vietnamese coast on Monday after tearing the roofs off hundreds of houses and breaching flood defenses overnight, the state-run Vietnam News Agency (VNA) reported.

Son-Tinh was at typhoon level when it thumped into northern Vietnam late Sunday with winds as strong as 133 kilometers per hour (83 mph). It left three people dead and two injured, according to an initial estimate from the Office of the National Search and Rescue Committee reported by (VNA).

More than a 1,300 rescue workers and soldiers have been deployed to work with local authorities on search and rescue efforts in the aftermath of the storm, VNA said. Helicopters were on standby for a search and rescue mission for an oil rig with 35 people on board that became disconnected from its towboats miles out at sea amid strong waves generated by the storm, according to VNA.

And five people were missing Sunday after winds from Son-Tinh sank an engineering vessel near a cargo terminal in Sanya, a city on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported.

Son-Tinh is expected to gradually weaken over the course of Monday, regional weather agencies said. At least 260,000 people in Vietnam had been relocated to safer areas as it approached Sunday.

The storm had already killed 27 people when it swept across the central Philippines during the second half of last week, causing flash floods and landslides, according to the Philippine National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council. Nine people remain missing, the council said Monday.

East Asia is buffeted for several months a year by heavy storms that roll in from the western Pacific Ocean. In August, a big typhoon, named Bolaven, killed more than 60 people on the Korean peninsula.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://edition.cnn.com/2012/10/29/world/asia/vietnam-tropical-storm/index.html?hpt=hp_t2

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Hurricane Sandy: Death Toll Rises To 65 In Caribbean

PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — As Americans braced Sunday for Hurricane Sandy, Haiti was still suffering.

Officials raised the storm-related death toll across the Caribbean to 65, with 51 of those coming in Haiti, which was pelted by three days of constant rains that ended only on Friday.

As the rains stopped and rivers began to recede, authorities were getting a fuller idea of how much damage Sandy brought on Haiti. Bridges collapsed. Banana crops were ruined. Homes were underwater. Officials said the death toll might still rise.

"This is a disaster of major proportions," Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe told The Associated Press, adding with a touch of hyperbole, "The whole south is under water."

The country's ramshackle housing and denuded hillsides are especially vulnerable to flooding. The bulk of the deaths were in the southern part of the country and the area around Port-au-Prince, the capital, which holds most of the 370,000 Haitians who are still living in flimsy shelters as a result of the devastating 2010 earthquake.

Santos Alexis, mayor of the southern city of Leogane, said Sunday that the rivers were receding and that people were beginning to dry their belongings in the sun.

"Things are back to being a little quiet," Alexis said by telephone. "We have seen the end."

Sandy also killed 11 in Cuba, where officials said it destroyed or damaged tens of thousands of houses. Deaths were also reported in Jamaica, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico. Authorities in the Dominican Republic said the storm destroyed several bridges and isolated at least 130 communities while damaging an estimated 3,500 homes.

In the Bahamas, Wolf Seyfert, operations director at local airline Western Air, said the domestic terminal of Grand Bahamas' airport received "substantial damage" from Sandy's battering storm surge and would need to be rebuilt.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/28/hurricane-sandy-death-toll_n_2034085.html

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Smolensk disaster victim identification

th the body of Tadeusz Lutoborski, the chairman of the Katyń Families organization, both of whom were victims of the April 10, 2010 airplane crash in Smolensk that killed 96 people, radio station RMF FM quotes unnamed investigators as saying.

Polish prosecutors haven’t confirmed the reports.

On Monday last week, the bodies of Mr Kaczorowski and Mr Lutoborski were exhumed. They were then transferred to the department of forensic medicine at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, where the bodies were examined using a CT scan. DNA samples were also taken.

“We are still waiting for the DNA results, and this could take up to seven days,” the Chief Military Prosecutor’s Office spokesperson Zbigniew Rzepa told TVN24 last week.

Earlier in October reports surfaced that an official from the Polish Foreign Ministry had made a mistake and misidentified the bodies during the post-crash identification process. Polish online news provider Onet.pl reported that more exhumations could be in store, all of which are a result of procedural errors made in the aftermath of the catastrophe.

Mr Kaczorowski’s was the sixth body to have been exhumed so far. Prosecutors have decided to go ahead with the exhumation after analyzing medical records, which pointed to errors that could have led to victims’ bodies being misidentified.

In September, the bodies of two Smolensk victims were exhumed, one in Warsaw and one in Kraków. Following DNA testing, prosecutors confirmed that the bodies of Anna Walentynowicz, legendary activist of the Solidarity trade union movement, and Teresa Walewska-Przyjałkowska, vice-president of the Golgotha of the East foundation, had been switched.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://www.wbj.pl/article-60819-spotlight-smolensk-disaster-victim-identification.html

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Horror crash kills 10

“IT was hell. Everyone was screaming and crying. I do not know what really happened because it was very fast like lightning.”

These were the words of Aino Iitembu (32), one of the survivors of a fatal accident which killed 10 people in the early hours of Saturday morning about 30km from Tsumeb on the road to Oshivelo.

A truck collided head-on with a Namib Contract Haulage Express Services bus after the driver allegedly swerved from his lane and ploughed into the oncoming bus. The bus was carrying 64 passengers while the truck had only two occupants.

Iitembu, a teacher of Bright Hill Pre-Primary School at Babylon in Windhoek, who was on her way to the funeral of a relative, said she did not know how she survived, because she was sitting in the front of the bus where many of the dead were sitting.

“I was sleeping and was woken up by a big bang sound,” she told The Namibian from her bed in the Oshakati State Hospital.

Most of the people in the bus were from the Ongandjera and Uukwaluudhi traditional districts and were on their way home for the weekend from Windhoek.

According to Motor Vehicle Accident Fund’s Catherine Shipushu, nine people died at the scene of the crash, while the 10th person died in hospital. The bus driver was one of those who died instantly.

“Around 28 people sustained varying degrees of injuries, with three confirmed cases of severe injuries. Two of the severely injured patients, one of whom is the truck driver, were airlifted from Tsumeb to Windhoek and are both currently in ICU. The third patient was transported to Ongwediva for further injury management. The ages and gender of the deceased have not been released as yet,” she said.

Health authorities at the Tsumeb District Hospital told The Namibian that they had treated 43 people while five were taken to Tsumeb Private Hospital.

Nine of those who where getting treatment at Tsumeb District Hospital were transferred to Oshakati State Hospital where they are currently getting treatment, the hospital said. All the bodies of those who died in the accident were taken to the Oshakati Police mortuary where relatives started arriving yesterday to identify them.

Oshana Police Commisioner Ndahangwapo Kashihakumwa called on those who might have lost relatives in the crash to go to the Oshakati Police mortuary to identify them. The Namibian arrived at the scene a few hours after the accident.

“When we got here, I couldn’t believe my eyes. Everyone was screaming and crying,” said Fritz Kantewa, an ambulance driver from Oshivelo.

Maria Sheya, a survivor and employee of the Kalahari Sands Hotel in Windhoek, said she was on her way to visit her mother in hospital.

She was also sleeping when the accident happened. So too was another survivor, Fransina Gotlieb (24), whose face was cut by broken glass.

Christofina Andreas (29) was not aware of the accident until people woke her up and told her that they had been in an accident. She also suffered cuts to her face.

Elizabeth Nakale (40) said her baby was ripped from her arms by the impact. Police later found the baby crying in the bush and returned it to her.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://www.namibian.com.na/news/full-story/archive/2012/october/article/horror-crash-kills-10/

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10 drown in Lagos boat mishap as LASEMA recovers 5 bodies

No fewer than 10 persons were Sunday drowned, when a passenger boat capsized in Ojo River, in Oto-Awori Local Council Development Area of Lagos State.

It would be recalled that last February, similar incident occurred in the council with five passengers, mainly school pupils, drowning.

Vanguard learnt that the boat capsized at about 11:00 a.m., due to the high tide experienced at the early hours of the day, following the rainfall which occurred late on Saturday.

Confirming the report, the General Manager of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, LASEMA, Dr. Femi Oke-Osanyintolu, said that five bodies have since been recovered from the river.

Oke-Osanyintolu explained “the boat was en route Imude from Ido-Oluwo, a riverine community in Oto-Awori LCDA.

According to him; “Immediately the agency was contacted, it deployed its search and rescue team to the scene of the incident. And since then, five bodies have been recovered from the river.”

Although he did not disclose the names of those whose bodies were recovered, he said that the five were aged between 10 and 16 years respectively.

When vanguard contacted the Baale of Ido-Oluwo, he declined comments, saying he was yet to be briefed properly on the cause of the incident.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/10/10-drown-in-lagos-boat-mishap-as-lasema-recovers-5-bodies/

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Jnaneswari victims' kin to move court

KOLKATA: Miffed over delay in issuing death certificates, members of 16 families, who lost their kin in the Jnaneswari Express accident on May 28, 2010, are planning to move the court. According to them, they can't even claim their jobs and succession documents in the absence of the death certificates.

Of the 150 victims of the tragedy, about 40 bodies were heavily mutilated and later many were identified through DNA matching. Still 23 bodies are still of the train accident are lying in the morgues for identification. As several DNA profiles did not match, the state, in June, 2012, the state government's home (political) department issued a missive to the relatives of 11 victims of the Jnaneswari express advising them to take legal route. The state had said that under the provision of law it's not permissible to issue death certificates unless the bodies are identified.

Juthika Atta, whose husband Prasenjit was in the S-3 compartment, is shattered. "His body could not be traced. DNA test didn't help. I got Rs 10 lakh as compensation. But I need a job to take care of my daughter Poulami (7) and the ailing in-laws. So, I need the death certificate.",the railways won't give me a job."

The compensation package included Rs 5 lakh from the railways, Rs 2 lakh from the PM's Relief Fund and Rs 3 lakh from the CM's Relief Fund.

For Rajesh Kumar Bathra, life came to a halt, as his wife Indu Devi, daughter Sneha (17) and son Saurav (13) were in the train on the fateful day. While Sneha could not be found, an injured Saurav died in a hospital on May 31,2010. He received his wife's body on December 26, 2010. "I visit Midnapore and Kharagpur regularly to find out Sneha."

Surendra Singh, who lost his wife Nilam (37) and sons Rahul (17) and Rohit (15), goes to Midnapore every month to find traces of missing Nilam and Rahul. Rohit was found dead on the spot. "My younger son Raju gave samples thrice for the DNA test. But Nilam and Rahul are still untraced. Raju had applied for a job in the railways, but they turned it down stating that he was only eligible in his father's absence."would have if the father had died then he would have been eligible."

Unnati Mondal lost her husband Swapan Mondal and with one-year old niece Latikais yet to get their death certificates.

Hisabuddin Sheikh is lobbying with the railway officials for a job for his nephew Selim Sheikh (19), as his brother Ayajuddin died in the accident. on his way to the middle-east.

But the death certificate is an impediment.

65-year old Suresh Gajbhiy's son Amit (31) and daughter-in-law Sunita died in the accident. "It is difficult for me to come from Nagpur for the death certificate." Similarly, Pankaj Upadhyay of Madhya Pradesh finds it difficult to come frequently to Kolkata for his brother Pradip's death certificate.

For 73-year-old Sushil Kumar Sil and his 65-year-old wife Mallika, life is of little value as they lost their son Tapas (42), daughter-in-law Chaitali (31), daughter Sujata Das (35), son-in-law Shyamal Das (38) and grandsons Srijit (10), Srinjay (3) and Siddhartha (7). They shifted to Sodepur from their Dunlop residence as it was impossible for them to stay in the same house.

Former chief justice of Calcutta high court Chittatosh Mookerjee said a petition before the court can help the kin get death certificates. He said that under the Evidence Act, a person, who had not been heard of for seven years, is presumed to be dead. "But the court, through inference, can direct for providing a death certificate, if it is proved that they had died due to the accident."

It is unending wait for 16 family members, who lost their dear ones in the Jnaneswari Express on May 28, 2010. They are yet to get death certificates of their relatives and so they are now moving high court for relief. Without it many are unable to claim jobs or get succession certificate.

Monday 29 October 2012

http://m.timesofindia.com/city/kolkata/Jnaneswari-victims-kin-to-move-court/articleshow/16998964.cms

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