Wednesday 7 January 2015

QZ8501: Eight more bodies identified


Eight more bodies have been identified by the Disaster Victims Identification (DVI) team today, bringing the total number of identified victims from the ill-fated AirAsia flight QZ8501 to 24 people.

DVI Head of Police East Java, General Commissioner Budiyono confirmed that the 24 bodies have been identified and brought to Bhayangkara Hospital, here today.

The identification process of the victims was based on the post-mortem data (as primary data) and ante-mortem (secondary data).

Budiyono said, 242 DVI experts from Malaysia, Singapore, Saudi Arabia and South Korea were tasked to identify the victims.

The eight remains have been handed to their respective families for the funeral.

AirAsia plane tail found

Divers and an unmanned underwater vehicle spotted the tail of the missing AirAsia plane in the Java Sea on Wednesday, the first confirmed sighting of any major wreckage 11 days after Flight 8501 disappeared with 162 people on board, an official said.

After days of strong currents and murky water that hindered the operation, searchers managed to get a photograph of the debris, National Search and Rescue chief Henry Bambang Soelistyo told reporters.

The find is particularly important because the all-important cockpit voice and flight data recorders, or black boxes, are located in the aircraft's tail. Small pieces of the plane, such as seats, have previously been spotted.

Soelistyo said the top priority remains recovering more bodies along with the black boxes. So far, 40 corpses have been found, including an additional one announced Wednesday, but time is running out.

Wednesday 7 January 2015

http://english.astroawani.com/news/show/qz8501-eight-more-bodies-identified-police-commissioner-budiyono-51721

http://www.stripes.com/news/pacific/searchers-find-tail-of-downed-airasia-plane-40-bodies-recovered-1.322642

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Two dead, 30 missing after rockslide at Myanmar jade mine


At least two people were killed and around 30 were missing on Wednesday after a mountain of rubble collapsed at a jade mine in northern Myanmar, a parliamentarian from the area said. A worker from a mining company, speaking on condition of anonymity due the sensitivity of the issue, said the death toll could reach 50 once all bodies have been retrieved from the remains of a massive pile of rock dumped by mining companies.

The local lawmaker, Kyaw Soe Lay, said rescue workers were clearing piles of rubble in the open pit mine in Hpakant, a town in Kachin state about 110 km (68 miles) from the regional capital Myitkyina.

“The mine dump measuring about 700 feet (213 metres) in height and about 1,500 feet in length collapsed today burying eleven shops,” said the mining company worker.

Accidents are frequent in Hpakant and victims are often “handpickers” — independent miners who find jade fragments by combing through unstable mountains of rubble. Hpakant is the largest source of Myanmar jade, which netted $3.4 billion in sales at the annual gems emporium, according to The Irrawaddy, a Myanmar-focused website and magazine which cited an official from the Mines Ministry.

Estimated revenues from the illegal trade dwarf that figure.

The Harvard Ash Center published a report in July 2013 that put unofficial sales at about $8 billion in 2011 with almost all of that jade smuggled over the border into China through territory controlled by the Kachin Independence Army (KIA), an ethnic insurgent group. The KIA ceded control of Hpakant to the government in 1994 when it signed a ceasefire agreement. But the ceasefire fell apart in 2011 and the government halted official mining for security reasons.

The Mines Ministry said last July it would allow companies to resume operations.

Wednesday 7 January 2015

http://www.euronews.com/newswires/2871366-two-dead-30-missing-after-rockslide-at-myanmar-jade-mine/

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