Monday, 3 December 2012

Update: Congo cargo plane crash death toll up to 32


A Congolese city morgue official on Sunday updated the death toll from a cargo plane crash two days ago to 32, as the search continued for more bodies in the wreckage at Brazzaville airport.

So far emergency workers had removed 32 bodies from the scene, 15 of whom had been identified, said the official. An earlier death toll from a hospital official put the total at 27.

All seven people on board the plane were killed as the plane skidded off the runway as it came into land in stormy weather, demolishing several homes and a bar before crashing into a ravine.

The other victims were those caught in the path of the crash, which left more than 30 others injured.

Five of the people on board the plane were Armenians, a civil aviation official in Yereven said Saturday. Their foreign ministry said that the aircraft belonged to Armenian freight specialist airline Rij Airways.

The Ilyushin plane, registered with local company Aero-services, was flying in from the western port city of Pointe Noire carrying cars and other goods.

Monday 3 December 2012

http://www.rnw.nl/africa/bulletin/congo-cargo-plane-crash-death-toll-32

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Harmony brings more bodies to surface in illegal mining disaster


Gold producer Harmony has confirmed that the number of illegal miner fatalities at its abandoned Eland shaft had reached 82, after another body was found on Monday morning.

Five bodies of trespassing miners had been brought to surface on Saturday, Harmony COO Tom Smith told Mining Weekly Online.

The deaths followed an apparent underground fire. It was suspected that the people died of smoke and gas inhalation, although Smith said that the results from the autopsies had not been made known yet.

Harmony spokesperson Marian van der Walt previously said that it remained uncertain what the extent of the incident was, and whether or not more bodies would be found.

An estimated 294 illegal miners have been brought to surface in connection to the mining at the Eland shaft, and have been charged.

Monday 3 December 2012

http://trustedarticleslibrary.com/harmony-brings-more-bodies-to-surface-in-illegal-mining-disaster/

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Update: Japan Sasago tunnel collapse killed nine


Nine people are now confirmed to have died after a major tunnel collapsed in Japan, officials say.

The bodies were found in three vehicles that were crushed by fallen concrete panels in the Sasago tunnel, about 80km (50 miles) west of the capital Tokyo.

A fire broke out after the tunnel caved in on Sunday, and a number of survivors fled to safety on foot.

The usually busy tunnel remains closed, as police are investigating potential negligence.

There will be serious questions about how a major tunnel on one of Japan's most important traffic arteries could have failed so catastrophically, the BBC's Rupert Wingfield Hayes in Tokyo reports.

The private company that runs the highway has said the tunnel was given a major inspection just two months ago and was given a clean bill of health, our correspondent adds.

Survivors' stories

Emergency workers said that five bodies were recovered from a van early on Monday. They were identified as three men and two women, all in their twenties and from Tokyo, Kyodo news agency reported.

Another woman, aged 28, who had been in the vehicle survived.

Three bodies were found in a car and another body in a lorry.

The driver of the lorry had reportedly telephoned for help from inside the 4.3km (2.7 miles) twin-bore tunnel - one of the longest in Japan.

Part of the tunnel collapsed at 08:00 local time (23:00 GMT Saturday).

Thick black smoke was seen billowing from the tunnel, hampering rescue efforts.

Pictures from closed circuit TV cameras inside the tunnel later showed a section of up to 100m (328ft) that had caved in on the Tokyo-bound lanes on the Chuo Expressway in Yamanashi prefecture.

A reporter for public broadcaster NHK described driving through the tunnel as it began to collapse, seeing other cars trapped and on fire. His car was badly damaged, he said.

Another survivor told the broadcaster that he saw "a concrete part of the ceiling fall off all of a sudden when I was driving inside. I saw a fire coming from a crushed car".

Survivor Tomohiro Suzuki said: "A part of the ceiling, just as wide as the road, had collapsed straight down and broken in the middle into a V-shape."

He and his family walked for an hour to get out, with the smoke worsening.

"I heard after a while on the public address system that a fire had occurred inside the tunnel and the sprinkler system was going to be activated," he told Jiji Press.

"I kept wondering when the fire would spread and catch us," Mr Suzuki said.

Japan is prone to large earthquakes, but none was reported in the area at the time.

Some experts have said that structural failure may be to blame - but this has not been confirmed by the authorities.

Monday 3 December 2012

http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-asia-20576492

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Bodies of Armenians killed in Congolese plane crash to be identified


The pilot in command of the cargo plane that crashed in the Congolese capital Friday, Nov 30 evening, has been identified.

“This was Varazdat Balasanyan, a citizen of Armenia,” spokesman for the Armenian Foreign Ministry Tigran Balayan told PanARMENIAN.Net

The bodies of Armenian citizens who died in Congolese plane crash will be identified in the days to come, Armenian Foreign Ministry’s Facebook page said.

On November 30, about 30 people, including the crew of 7; 5 of them Armenian citizens, were killed when Il76 Armenian cargo plane chartered by Aéro-Service Congolese airline skidded off the runway and crashed into houses and a bar in the Congolese capital.

Earlier, spokesperson for Armenia’s General Department of Civil Aviation, Ms. Nelly Cherchinyan told a PanARMENIAN.Net reporter that the crew consisted of 7 people, of whom 5 were Armenian citizens.

Among those perished are Ara Tovmasyan; Andranik Gevorgyan; Edgar Avetyan, born 1989.

The Ilyushin plane, registered with local company Aero-services, was flying in from the western port city of Pointe Noire carrying cars and other goods.

Monday 3 December 2012

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/135500/

http://www.panarmenian.net/eng/news/135253/

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Burma: Lives still in limbo 4 years after Cyclone Nargis


When Cyclone Nargis tore through Burma's Irrawaddy Delta in 2008, the locals took shelter in rice sheds and temples, tied themselves to coconut trees and prayed they would survive the storm. Up to 200,000 of them perished.

Four-and-a-half years later, people are still struggling to find new livelihoods, farm the paddy fields that were inundated with salt water, and rebuild communities that lost up to a third of their population. They are also having to deal with the persistent trauma of what happened that spring night.

"Of course there is a psychological effect. It was traumatic," said Hla Aye, a 62-year-old woman who makes a living as a day labourer in Pyin Ma Gone, a village accessible only by boat, close to the delta town of Bogale.

"Sometimes when it rains, some of the children refuse to go outside. The parents have to tell them not to be so afraid of the storm and rains."

The raw power of Cyclone Nargis not only devastated the communities of the Irrawaddy Delta. It also shone a light on the inefficiency and cruelty of Burma's military junta, whose response was both inadequate and scornful. The generals expended more effort trying to prevent foreign aid workers and Burmese volunteers from Rangoon from reaching the region than they did helping those who were affected.

A famous Burmese writer and comedian, Maung Thura, better known as Zarganar, was arrested and jailed after organising food convoys and criticising the government's response. Even now, the media needs a special permit to visit. The Independent was among a group of international reporters taken to the delta by the EU to see the progress of European-funded development projects. The coming to power of a nominally civilian government in Burma that has embarked on a series of reforms has made things easier for those involved in efforts to rebuild lives in the Delta. Among the most important tasks are providing clean water in remote villages and income generation projects.

Half-an-hour downstream the Bogale River from Pyin Ma Gone lies the community of Myit Poe Kyone Sein. There, villagers have learnt how to plant eucalyptus trees and mangroves to provide timber and erosion breaks and build energy-efficient ovens from clay and banana-tree sawdust. They have recently also reaped the benefits of having access to micro-loans.

"I set up a shop selling vegetables and snacks," said Ai Win, one of 50 women in the village who are part of the loan scheme and who meet in a large thatched hut.

The reforms carried out by the government of President Thein Sein have brought changes to the lives of those in the Delta in other ways. Everyone in Pyin Ma Gone knew that Barack Obama had visited Rangoon, and met President Thein Sein and the opposition leader Aung San Suu Kyi – they had listened to the news on the television or the radio.

"We are beginning to see some freedoms starting. We feel we can speak more openly," said Hla Kyi, a 65-year-old farmer. "Before, if something was wrong we were too scared to speak to the village authorities. Now we can talk to them about matters of justice."

As an example, Mr Kyi said that previously if two people had quarrelled and one of those involved had been related to a government official, no one would have raised the matter. Nowadays there was more confidence.

There was also more hope for the future. Another farmer, Than Khe, 53, said he had little knowledge of the changes that had taken place in the government. He also knew that their lives had not yet fully recovered from the impact of Nargis. And yet he said: "We do trust. We do believe. We believe our lives will get better."

Harder to tackle than field-testing salt-tolerant rice seedlings to counter the salination that took place, and replacing destroyed mangroves, is the sheer scale of loss. The village of Pyin Ma Gone lost 33 per cent of its population to Nargis while the death toll in Myit Poe Kyone Sein amounted to 25 per cent.

Everyone, it seemed, had friends or relatives who had lost their lives. Than Khe lost his wife, daughter-in-law and six employees, Hla Kyi lost a daughter and daughter-in-law. Two of Hla Aye's sons and daughter-in-laws were also among the dead.

The bodies of many of those who died were never found – swept out to sea or else carried by the tides to another community who had no idea who they might be. Most were buried as there was no fuel for cremation fires.

"A year after Nargis, if a farmer's crop grew particularly well in one patch, you knew that a body was there," said Win Sein Naing, of the Mangrove Service Network, a local group that has been trying to develop livelihoods.

Myo Win, 41, who works for another NGO, was at his parents' home in the town of Bogale when Nargis struck. He survived by leaning against the outside wall that did not face the storm. At the very height of the surge – around 3.30am – the water came up to his chest. By 5am, it had gone.

His main concern had been for his wife and children, who were at his home by themselves. As it was, they survived largely unscathed, but Mr Win's son, Phyo Htet Kyaw, now aged six, is among those children for whom the annual monsoon may always be a cause for anxiety. "He cannot go outside when it rains," he said.

Monday 3 December 2012

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/asia/lives-still-in-limbo-for-burmas-forgotten-cyclone-victims-8374277.html

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Sunday, 2 December 2012

A forensic anthropologist's life and work


If Zhou Xueliang says he is the most experienced forensic anthropologist in Jiangsu's provincial capital of Nanjing, no one will dispute that.

Although he retired 24 years ago, the 90-year-old still goes to work every day by bus. He has a lab in the Forensic Identification Center under Nanjing Medical University. The lab is piled high with books and materials. On his desk sits a microscope that has helped him anatomize more than 1,000 bodies.

"I recognize more dead people than living ones," Zhou says with a smile.

It wasn't Zhou's first choice to be a forensic anthropologist. He entered medical school in 1946 to achieve his aspiration of becoming a doctor. But when he graduated in 1951, the university asked him to become a forensic assistant.

"I chose to study in a medical school to solve the problems of living people, not to spend time with the dead," Zhou says. But after some consideration, he agreed to accept the university's offer and worked hard to overcome his fear.

When he was an undergraduate, Zhou sometimes went looking for unidentified bodies in abandoned areas together with some male classmates.

"I've seen all types of corpses died of various reasons," Zhou says. "The most horrible bodies are those who died of drowning, with terribly swollen faces and stomachs."

Dissecting bodies is his core job. "Take the human brain, for example. The brain is as soft as fresh tofu, and thus, it's hard to cut. We need to add formaldehyde so that it will stiffen.

"But the career requires us to overcome our fears, and we got used to the bodies after awhile," Zhou says. "My nose is not sensitive to the smell of decomposed bodies now."

The man says his job is like a detective's. "A forensic anthropologist needs to combine professional knowledge with reality, such as the victim's health condition, the family background and the social network, to consolidate the conclusion of the anatomy."

Citing an example, Zhou says there was a case of a female teacher who died naked in Hunan province in February 2003, and the forensic department helped to solve the crime.

The local court first thought the woman died of acute cardiopulmonary failure. But after careful examination, Zhou and his colleagues found subcutaneous hemorrhaging in several parts of the body that were not easily touched. The court finally delivered the verdict that the boyfriend was 50 percent responsible for the death due to "improper behavior".

In another case, a man in his 30s died in his own apartment in Liyang of Jiangsu province, with his throat and sex organs cut open. Investigations by local police found that the man cheated on his wife and had a mistress.

"It was easy to draw the conclusion that the man was murdered," Zhou says. "But suicide and murder display differently - the directions, depth and places of the cuts, as well as the bleeding and the struggles were not the same. From the evidence collected, I concluded that the man committed suicide."

Because of Zhou's professionalism, he supervises his young colleagues in the forensic identification center, says Li Kai, one of the center's staff. "We usually ask Professor Zhou to check our anatomy reports before we release them. His opinions and suggestions are very helpful."

Zhou says although he's 90 years old, he is still constantly learning. "This is required by our career. We need to keep up to date with knowledge related to our work, such as brain surgery, gynecology and internal medicine."

A book titled Diagnostic Pathology in Zhou's office looks dirty and well-used, evidence that it is frequently used as a reference.

He volunteered to donate his body as early as 1998, together with his brother and sister-in-law, and says he is satisfied with his meaningful life.

Because forensic anthropologists' anatomy reports have considerable influence over the courts, people involved in the investigated cases visit Zhou from time to time.

He has been harassed and received threatening telephone calls in the middle of the night. But he says he has never once submitted to coercion or inducement.

"We must be just and objective," Zhou says.

"Doctors pay attention to efficacy, we pay attention to jurisprudence. Doctors give patients health, we give the dead justice."

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://www.gg-art.com/news/newsread/artnews111694.html

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Five Germans killed in Egypt bus crash

Five German tourists and two Egyptians were killed in a bus crash near an Egyptian Red Sea resort on Sunday, police officials said.

Berlin's foreign ministry confirmed that Germans had died in the accident, without specifying the number.

The tourists died when two mini-buses crashed inside a resort near the popular tourist destination Hurghada, officials said.

A number of tourists were also wounded in the crash, they said, without giving further details.

"We unfortunately have to convey that German citizens have been killed and... injured in an accident on the Egyptian coast of the Red Sea," a German foreign ministry spokesman said.

"Foreign Minister (Guido) Westerwelle has activated the foreign ministry's crisis management group. The German ambassador is on the way to the site of the accident," he added.

Road accidents are common in Egypt, largely due to bad road conditions and lax enforcement of traffic laws.

On Friday, two Russian tourists were killed when their bus overturned near the Sinai resort of Nuweiba, police said.

And on November 17, 47 Egyptian school children were killed when a train smashed into their bus in central Egypt.

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://ph.news.yahoo.com/five-german-tourists-killed-egypt-bus-crash-094825467.html

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Yerevan says Brazzaville crash plane was Armenian

A cargo plan that crashed at Brazzaville airport killing at least 27 people belonged to the Armenian freight specialist airline Rij Airways, the foreign ministry in Yerevan said Saturday.

The plane, carrying seven crew members, crashed as it tried to land in a storm on Friday.

Most of the victims were local people killed when the plane skidded off the runway and ploughed into houses and a bar in the Congolese capital.

"According to initial information, the crew was made up of seven people, of whom five were Armenian," added Armenian civil aviation authority spokeswoman Nelli Tchertchinian.

"They all died," she said.

In Brazzaville, a hospital official told AFP there were 27 bodies. It was not clear if this included the crew.

More than 30 others were injured in the disaster.

The four-engine Ilyushin T76 plane had earlier taken off from the western port city of Pointe Noire.

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5iRSXFnPLLRa5MoMGQpfBKujkR9og?docId=CNG.1039b89f58178ec8478bc951d0e550c3.6d1

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13 dead, scores injured in Mbale, Kabale accidents


Cries and screams filled the air on the Mbale-Kampala highway following a grisly accident that claimed the lives of 12 youths participating in the Imbalu circumcision procession on Friday night.

The accident, according to witnesses, occurred at around 9:20pm after a speeding Omni bus tried to dodge an oncoming commuter taxi and instead swerved off the road and rammed into the dancers killing 12 on the spot and injuring several others.

The accident occurred at Kamonkole Trading Centre, five kilometres from Mbale Town.

The deceased

Relatives of the deceased, who rushed to the scene, wailed as they tried to identify the bodies.

The dead were identified as Fatuma Madango, who was pregnant, Michael Oumo, 24, Julius Balamu Wavuna, 21, Richard Podo, 36, Mubage, 25, Ednand Mirifibi, 16 and Caroline Nabwire, 14.

Others are Ismail Kowe,12,Alex Menya,14,Namulumbi,24,Magino,14,Madango,32 and a one Patrick,15. The injured, whose numbers are yet to be known, were rushed to Mbale hospital.

The accident scene later turned chaotic as angry residents set ablaze the two vehicles involved in the accident, forcing their drivers to flee.

The resident blocked the road for close to two hours, forcing the police to fire live bullets in the air to disperse them.

The District Police Commander, Mr Martin Otim, attributed the accident to speeding. The area from Kamonkole to Jami Trading Centre is a black spot that has claimed about 500 lives in the last five years.

Kabale tragedy

Meanwhile, traffic along the Kabale-Mbarara highway came to stand still on Saturday morning when a fuel tanker lost control and overturned before it burst into flames at Kyanamira Trading Centre.

The driver was burnt beyond recognition. The police identified him as Paulo Maina 40, a resident of Nyeru in Kenya.

His tout Patrick Musiri 22, a resident of Embu, Kenya was severely burnt and rushed to Kabale hospital.

“The accident happened at around 10:30am. The tanker was carrying fuel from Nakuru, Kenya to Rwanda. We suspect that the cause of this accident is reckless driving,” Kabale District Police Commander Bosco Arop said.

The district has no fire truck and police commander for Kigezi sub-region Olivia Wawire said they had called the Fire Brigade from Mbarara District to rescue the situation.

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://www.monitor.co.ug/News/National/13-dead--scores-injured-in-Mbale--Kabale-accidents/-/688334/1634518/-/dhq3cd/-/index.html

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Update: Avalanche death toll reaches 18


Death toll in the deadly landslides at the Sharda Sector in Azad Kashmir climbed to 18 on Saturday as rescuers recovered more dead bodies.

Sixteen bodies, including that of 12 soldiers, have so far been retrieved. A military rescue operation swung into action after heavy snows on Friday triggered two landslides at a remote outpost in the Kel area of Azad Kashmir near the Line of Control (LoC) with India.

The soldiers were on a mission to find three colleagues buried by an earlier avalanche on Friday. The party of rescuers had found two bodies when another avalanche struck in the mountainous Neelum Valley. ISPR has confirmed that bodies of five soldiers including an officer and four civilians buried under the snow were recovered on Saturday. Search was under way for remaining missing persons.

"Three bodies of soldiers were recovered yesterday. The bodies of five soldiers, including a captain, and four civilians have been recovered today (Saturday)," said a statement by the military.

As per police, bodies of the persons retrieved so far were identified as M Anwar, M Khurshid, M Afzal, Gul Hussain Munir Ahmad, Capt Imran, non commissioned officer Dost M, Havaldar Mehmood Alam, Sepoy Matin Ahmad, Sepoy M Khan, Sepoy M Tahir, Sepoy M Sakhawat Hussain, Sepoy M Hussain, Sepoy M Aslam, Sepoy Atta Ullah, Sepoy Farman Hayat and Sepoy Khalid.

Local administration officials said they were searching for more dead bodies as nine people from the rescue party were still missing.

In April, 140 soldiers were buried when a huge wall of snow crashed into the remote Siachen Glacier base high in the mountains in Kashmir. They have all been declared dead, although some of the bodies remain buried.

That tragedy renewed debate about how much sense it made for a country where millions live below the poverty line to maintain outposts in Siachen, dubbed "the world's highest battleground", at immense cost when violence had decreased.

And in February, at least 16 Indian soldiers on duty in the mountains of Held Kashmir were killed when two avalanches swept through army camps.

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/national/02-Dec-2012/avalanche-death-toll-reaches-18

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PIL seeks DNA profile of unidentfied bodies


About 40,000 unidentified bodies are disposed of every year removing every trace of their once earthly existence. During the same period thousands go missing from across the country. Is there a link between the unidentified bodies and the missing persons?

A PIL raised this important question and suggested keeping a DNA profile of the bodies before their disposal could help breaking the news of the death to those families waiting the homecoming of their near and dear ones who have gone missing.

The Supreme Court entertained this PIL by NGO Lokniti Foundation and issued notice to ministry of home affairs, the Central Bureau of Investigation (CBI) and secretary, department of scientific & industrial research seeking their response to the petition.

Petitioner's counsel Ashok Dhamija said the unidentified bodies could be because of a serious crime and "since the bodies cannot be identified using traditional methods, the perpetrators of the possible crime remain untraced and the families, to which the victims belonged, never come to know about the fate of their near and dear ones."

"DNA profiling of unidentified bodies can help match the missing persons. In addition, the DNA profiling of missing persons could help trace them and reunite several who had either been missing or kidnapped as children and forced into prostitution, bonded labour or even those who have turned mentally unstable," Dhamija said.

The petitioner said that though the government had been considering a proposal for DNA profiling of unidentified bodies since 2007, no decision had been taken yet. As per the data compiled by the National Crime Records Bureau, number of unidentified bodies recovered and inquest conducted were 37,282 in 2007, 37,668 (2008), 34,902 (2009), 33,857 (2010) and 37,193 (2011).

In 2011, highest number of unidentified bodies was recovered in Maharashtra (6,313), followed by Tamil Nadu (4,479), Uttar Pradesh (4,084), West Bengal (3,704), Delhi (2,748), Andhra Pradesh (2,639), Karnataka (2,440), Gujarat (2,099), Madhya Pradesh (1,191), Rajasthan (1,170), Haryana (1,159) and Punjab (1,004).

The petitioner said, "One of the main reasons for large number of bodies remaining unidentified is that person freely moves from one part to another in search of work and members of poor families have no means to keep in touch with their near and dear ones. It becomes difficult for the local police to identify persons who have no local connection and who have died without any one complaining of death caused by any mischief."

It said a total of 11,846, 13,586 and 13,268 people went missing in Delhi alone in 2006, 2007 and 2008, respectively. From Andhra Pradesh a total of 47,936 went missing during 2009-12 and in Gujarat another 37,395 were reported missing during 2007-11.

So is there not a link between the missing persons and unidentified bodies which could be unraveled through DNA profiling of the dead yet unidentified? asked the petitioner.

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/PIL-seeks-DNA-profile-of-unidentfied-bodies/articleshow/17446665.cms

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Japanese police find charred bodies inside collapsed tunnel; rescue suspended


Japanese rescuers found five charred bodies in a highway tunnel that collapsed on Sunday, crushing cars and triggering a blaze, and sparking fears of another cave-in.

At least seven people were missing inside the nearly five-kilometer (three mile)-long tunnel. Witnesses spoke of terrifying scenes as at least one vehicle burst into flames, sending out clouds of blinding, acrid smoke.

Rescuers were forced to suspend work for several hours in their efforts to reach those believed trapped under thick concrete ceiling panels that crashed from the roof of the tunnel when engineers warned more debris could fall.

Emergency crews who rushed to the Sasago tunnel on the Chuo Expressway, 80 kilometers (50 miles) west of the capital, were hampered by thick smoke billowing from the entrance.

Dozens of people abandoned their vehicles on the Tokyo-bound section of carriageway, and ran for one of the emergency exits or for the mouth, where they huddled in bitter winter weather.

Emergency crews equipped with breathing apparatus battled around a third of the way into the tunnel, where they found up to 70 meters of concrete panels had come crashing down, crushing at least two vehicles.

Hours after the collapse, engineers warned the structure could be unstable, forcing rescuers to halt their work as a team of experts assessed the danger.

It was during this inspection that accompanying police officers confirmed the first deaths.

“What we found resembled bodies inside a vehicle, they were blackened. We have visually confirmed them but have yet to take them out for closer examination,” an official told AFP.

The Fire and Disaster Management Agency later confirmed there were five bodies, adding another vehicle had also been burned.

By late afternoon the operation had resumed. Footage from security cameras showed large concrete panels in a V shape, apparently having collapsed from the middle, with teams of men in protective gear scrambling over them.

One 28-year-old woman who emerged from the smoke-darkened tunnel by herself told rescuers she had been in a rented van with five other people, fire department official Kazuya Tezuka told AFP by telephone.

“I have no idea about what happened to the five others. I don’t know how many vehicles were ahead and behind ours,” she was quoted as saying.

A truck driver who telephoned a colleague from inside the tunnel was also believed to be trapped.

An AFP reporter said two large orange tents had been erected at the tunnel mouth and a helicopter remained nearby, ready to ferry the injured to hospital.

The tunnel, which passes through hills not far from Mount Fuji, is one of the longest in Japan. It sits on a major road connecting Tokyo with the centre and west of the country.

An NHK reporter was passing through the tunnel on his way to Tokyo when it started to disintegrate.

“I managed to drive through the tunnel but vehicles nearby appeared to have been trapped,” he said. “Black smoke was coming and there seemed to be a fire inside the tunnel.”

A man in his 30s, who was just 50 meters ahead of the caved-in spot, recounted details of the terrifying experience

. “A concrete part of the ceiling fell off all of a sudden when I was driving inside. I saw fire coming from a crushed car. I was so frightened I got out of my car right away and walked one hour to get outside,” he told NHK.

Japan has an extensive and well-maintained network of highways with thousands of tunnels, usually several hundred metres long. Millions of cars use the network every day.

Chikaosa Tanimoto, professor emeritus of tunnel engineering at Osaka University told NHK ceilings are made from concrete panels suspended from pillars.

“Speaking only generally, because it is an old tunnel, it is conceivable that the parts connecting the ceiling panels and pillars, or pillars themselves, have deteriorated, affected by vibrations from earthquakes and passing vehicles,” he said.

Sunday 2 December 2012

http://www.thehindu.com/news/international/japanese-police-find-charred-bodies-inside-collapsed-tunnel-rescue-suspended/article4156157.ece

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Saturday, 1 December 2012

Mexican families carry out their own investigations to find the disappeared

Since her teenage daughter went missing eight years ago, Silvia Ortiz has known that any progress in the case depends on her alone. "I still don't know if Fanny is alive or not. Maybe she is in a mass grave and I will never find her, but I have to keep looking," Ortiz says. "If I don't, who will?"

This was true even in the hours immediately after Fanny's disappearance on her way home from a basketball match in the city of Torreón in northern Mexico. With the police dragging their feet, the family brought in sniffer dogs that followed the 16-year-old's trail until it stopped abruptly at a roadside. Then they found clues linking the abduction to criminals associated with the Zetas drug cartel. When the authorities still did nothing, they discovered that the official heading the investigation was the lover of one of their prime suspects.

In the following years, the pattern was repeated: Ortiz turned up fresh leads, only for the authorities to ignore them. Meanwhile, Mexico's drug war spiralled out of control: tens of thousands were killed – more than 100,000 by some counts – and many others simply vanished. There is no reliable data on the number of people forcibly disappeared during the drug violence, but a document from the Mexican attorney general's office leaked to the Washington Post lists 25,000 adults and children who have gone missing since the start of the Calderón offensive. The documents were reportedly leaked by bureaucrats frustrated with the outgoing government's failure to openly recognise the size of the problem.

For Ortiz, the trauma of her loss was revived in October, when the Zetas' leader, Heriberto Lazcano – known as "El Lazca" – was shot dead by the Mexican navy in an episode shrouded in confusion. Lazcano's body was apparently snatched from a funeral parlour a few hours after his death, but reports soon emerged that a photograph found among his belongings showed the capo sitting beside a young woman who resembled Fanny.

"Of course my heart jumped," Ortiz says. "I would be lying if I said that I didn't believe it was her at first, but my son kept saying: 'No way, forget it, it isn't her, look at the nose.'"

Even in that first flush of false hope there was terror. Whether it was or wasn't Fanny, being so publicly associated with Lazcano was dangerous. If Fanny had ended up in Lazcano's hands, she would now be especially vulnerable to the attentions of rival cartels.

Things only got worse when the Coahuila state attorney general told reporters a recently arrested Zetas commander nicknamed "the Squirrel" had confessed that he abducted Fanny and took her to Lazcano. "It is hard to explain the enormous pain that this generated for us," Ortiz says. "We didn't sleep at all. We jumped up at every tiny noise to see if they were coming for us."

Ortiz soon became convinced that the woman in the photograph was not Fanny. She says she tracked down the real subject of the picture, who told her the man by her side was not even Lazcano. Then she found out from federal officials that neither the story about the photograph being found in his clothes, nor the Squirrel's confession, were true. After a moment in the media spotlight, Ortiz fears Fanny will slip back into anonymity "like all the thousands of other disappeared people".

The attention given to Fanny's case in recent weeks was certainly unusual, but her family's investigative efforts and determination to keep up the pressure in the face of government inaction, incompetence or complicity is not.

Jorge Verástegui found links to local police behind the abduction of his brother and nephew in Coahuila after a religious meeting in 2009. This brought "friendly advice" from officials to tone things down for his own safety, which he ignored: "I don't know at what point I broke the fear barrier but the promise that I have made to myself and my family is much bigger."

Verástegui pins his hopes on collective action. He admits the relatives' group in Coahuila that he helped form, which has registered 258 forced disappearances since 2008, has not won significant improvements in investigations. But, he says, it has provided mutual support and chiselled away at the widely held assumption that those who go missing in drug war hotspots must have some link to organised crime. "We are cleaning the image of the disappeared," he says. "People are beginning to realise that this is something that could happen to anybody."

The dynamics of disappearances vary but Verástegui believes that in Coahuila they are associated with forced recruitment into the cartels, suggesting some of the missing could be packing drugs in safe houses or working as hitmen. "No other explanation fits the fact that ransoms are not demanded in most cases," he says. "It is also a hypothesis that gives us hope of finding them alive."

Fanny's mother will never let go of that hope until she has a fully identified body to bury. "All I want is to see my baby," she says. "All I want is to tell her I love her, and to tell her I want to heal her wounds."

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://www.guardian.co.uk/world/2012/nov/30/mexico-disappeared-drug-war-calderon

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Missing people, reporting is a duty of all


In Italy, from now on, anyone who becomes aware of the disappearance of someone, can report it to the Police, that will immediately start the research.

A possibility, therefore, which will no longer be due just to the family of the missing person.

This is the main novelty of the law 203/2012, just come into force, which aims to simplify the procedures for the search of those who went away from home for no apparent reason and under circumstances such as to suggest that his/her own life or personal safety is at risk.

The text also provides for the early involvement, by the prefects, of the Special Commissioner for missing persons, so as soon as possible to take all steps within its competence, using the aid of local authorities, the National Body of firefighters and civil protection system, associations of social volunteering all other bodies, public and private, active in the territory.

Finally, the new law establishes the obligation for the person who has denounced the disappearance, to withdraw the report in case there are not anymore the reasons that led him or her to turn to the authorities.

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://www.west-info.eu/missing-people-reporting-is-a-duty-of-all/

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Mexico: More than 25,000 people disappear in six years


Mexico's Attorney General has compiled a list showing that more than 25,000 adults and children have gone missing in Mexico in the past six years, according to unpublished government documents.

The data sets, submitted by state prosecutors and vetted by the federal government but never released to the public, chronicle the disappearance of tens of thousands of people in the chaos and violence that have enveloped Mexico during its fight against drug mafias and crime gangs.

Families have been left wondering whether their loved ones are alive or among the more than 100,000 victims of homicides recorded during the presidency of Felipe Calderon, who leaves office today. The names on the list – many more than in previous, non-government estimates – are recorded in columns, along with the dates they disappeared, their ages, the clothes they were wearing, their jobs and a few brief, often chilling, details:

"His wife went to buy medicine and disappeared," reads one typical entry. "The son was addicted to drugs." "Her daughter was forced into a car." "The father was arrested by men wearing uniforms and never seen again."

The documents were provided by bureaucrats frustrated by what they describe as a lack of official transparency and the failure of government agencies to investigate the cases.

The leaked list is not complete – or, probably, precise. Some of the missing may have returned to their homes, and some families may never have reported disappearances.

But the list offers a rare glimpse of the running tally the Mexican government has been keeping, and it confirms what human rights activists and families of the missing have been saying: that Mexico has seen an explosion in the number of such cases and that the government appears to be overwhelmed. "What does the government do? Nothing or almost nothing. Why? There is a paralysis," said Juan Lopez Villanueva of the group United Forces for Our Missing in Mexico. "The state has failed us."

According to the National Commission on Human Rights, more than 7,000 people killed in Mexico in the past six years lie unidentified in morgue freezers or common graves. The commission's numbers suggest the government count might be accurate.

From 2006 to mid-2011, the commission notes that more than 18,000 Mexicans were reported missing.

Mr Calderon's spokesman declined to offer a reason why the numbers have not been made public during his tenure, and the Attorney General's office did not respond to questions.

Critics say the outgoing government is burying the numbers because their publication would highlight Mexico's failure to investigate the cases, and undermine efforts by Mr Calderon to show his fight against organised crime is working.

"Releasing the data would add to the already deteriorating forecast about growing insecurity, and publishing such a very large number just reinforces the idea that the country is violent," said Edna Jaime Trevino, director of the think tank Mexico Evalua.

The task of tracking the missing now falls to the incoming President Enrique Pena Nieto's new government. There is no statute of limitations for missing-person cases, and Mexico has heard withering criticism from both the Inter-American Court of Human Rights and the United Nations about its handling of them.

In December 2011, Mr Calderon pledged to create a national database including lists of the people who had disappeared and of unidentified bodies, and he promised it would be ready in early 2012.

Then in March, the Mexican Congress passed a law that required the government to establish Mr Calderon's database, which medical examiners, law enforcement officials and families could use to help track cases. Since then, politicians have failed to publish the regulations that would allow the law to be implemented.

State prosecutors agreed to provide data from their missing-person cases to the Attorney General, but their reports appear uneven. For example, prosecutors in the northern border states of Chihuahua and Coahuila report only a few hundred cases, even as the governors of those states have stated that there were many more.

It remains to be seen if this will change with incoming president Enrique Peña Nieto.

The list of more than 200 pledges from his new administration does not mention the victims of the violence, and he has given little indication of what steps he will take to improve their situation.

The list of necessities is a long one.

The majority of Mexico's states don't have the technology to do DNA testing and crime scenes are regularly tainted by untrained investigators.

Many relatives of those disappeared think twice before going to local police forces, often fearing local officials may be in the pay of those who murdered their loved ones.

Peña Nieto has talked of reforming and retraining police, just as his predecessor did. But rooting out corruption among badly paid and frequently uneducated local police has proved to be easier said than done.

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/world/americas/mexico-more-than-25000-people-disappear-in-six-years-8372482.html http://www.aljazeera.com/indepth/features/2012/11/20121130182316164681.html

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Tijuana site may contain up to 100 dissolved bodies

Authorities searching a vacant property in eastern Tijuana may have found the remains of dozens of drug-war victims gone missing after they were dissolved in lye by a man known as El Pozolero — the stew maker.

“We believe that there could be more than 100 bodies dissolved there,” said Abel Galván Gallardo, head of Baja California’s organized-crime unit. “There is the total possibility of being able to tell families that their loved one is here.”

The search began Tuesday and is likely to last at least into next week, Galván said Thursday.

By Friday afternoon, federal investigators had discovered 80 human bones and 25 teeth, said Fernando Ocegueda, leader of the group United for the Disappeared of Baja California, which has been collaborating closely with authorities in the excavation effort. The organization represents family members of 280 people, many of whom disappeared at the height of drug violence in Baja California — from 2007 to 2010.

Human-rights activists believe scores of people have disappeared amid fighting among rival drug-trafficking groups and between law enforcement and organized crime. Mexico’s National Commission for Human Rights has said more than 18,000 Mexicans were reported missing between 2006 and mid-2011. The Washington Post, citing unpublished government documents, reported Friday that the number is closer to 25,000.

In eastern Tijuana, investigators are combing through what Galván and Ocegueda described as “organic mass” found in a pit dug four feet underground. Their goal is to unearth as many bones and teeth as possible, then match the DNA from that evidence with DNA samples provided by victims’ family members.

Ocegueda said a second pit was discovered on the property Friday, but that investigators were still combing through the first one. He also said each pit is connected by a duct to a small room “where they would cook the bodies.” A spigot would be opened after the corpses were dissolved, allowing the remains to fall by gravity into the pit.

The bodies were likely dissolved by Santiago Meza López, nicknamed El Pozolero, who confessed to liquefying the corpses of about 300 organized-crime victims by the time Mexican troops captured him outside Ensenada in January 2009. Meza reported to Teodoro García Simental, a member of the Arellano Félix cartel who broke from that organization and formed an alliance with the Sinaloa cartel. Known for his brutality, García was arrested in February 2010.

Ocegueda said his group led investigators to the eastern Tijuana site in the struggling neighborhood of Maclovio Rojas, located off the free road to Tecate. He was able to locate it after being leaked a report of Meza’s confession, which said he had disposed of bodies in a cockfighting ranch.

“There’s something like 80 cockfighting ranches in that area,” Ocegueda said, and it took two years to pinpoint the correct spot.

The site is one of five where Meza said he had disposed the corpses of García’s victims, according to Ocequeda. United for the Disappeared of Baja California said it has looked at nearly three dozen sites in the past two years, including 13 that involved federal investigators.

Two of those sites yielded remains, Ocegueda said, but this week’s excavation seems the most promising to date. Remains at the previous loations were too decomposed to make any positive identifications, Ocegueda said.

“This shows that when you set a goal, you can reach it,” Ocegueda said. “We had to put a lot of pressure on the authorities.”

He plans to continue searching for the two other locations where Meza reportedly dissolved bodies. “For me, it is a great satisfaction having found this — and perhaps bring peace to some families,” said Ocegueda, whose own son has been missing since he was seized from the family’s residence in 2006.

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://www.nctimes.com/tijuana-site-may-contain-up-to-dissolved-bodies/article_ecc61401-ae99-545b-ae6c-d3f16e1c156a.html

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Update: Pakistan recovers 12 bodies buried under landslides


At least 12 people have been killed, including eight Pakistani soldiers, and nine people are missing after being hit by landslides in the mountainous Kashmir region, officials said on Saturday.

A military rescue operation swung into action after heavy snows on Friday triggered two landslides at a remote outpost in the Kel area of Pakistan-administered Kashmir near the de facto border with India.

"Three bodies of soldiers were recovered yesterday. The dead bodies of five soldiers including a captain and four civilians have been recovered today (Saturday)," said a statement by the military.

Local administration officials said they were searching for more dead bodies as nine people from the rescue party were still missing.

"Eight soldiers and 10 civilians went to rescue the soldiers at the post, all of the rescuers were buried in the second landslide, so we are searching for the rest of the bodies," local administration official Raja Saqib Muneer told AFP.

Disputed Kashmir has caused two of the three wars between India and Pakistan since their independence from Britain in 1947.

But with separatist violence having dropped sharply since a peace process began in 2004, the greatest dangers facing soldiers stationed at remote outposts are often landslides and extreme weather conditions.

In April, 140 Pakistani soldiers were buried when a huge wall of snow crashed into the remote Siachen Glacier base high in the mountains in Kashmir. They have all been declared dead, although some of the bodies remain buried.

That tragedy renewed debate about how much sense it made for a country where millions live below the poverty line to maintain outposts in Siachen, dubbed "the world's highest battleground", at immense cost when violence had decreased.

And in February, at least 16 Indian soldiers on duty in the mountains of Kashmir were killed when two avalanches swept through army camps.

In Friday's accident, a wall of mud and snow hit the outpost in the early hours, said Muneer, deputy commissioner of Neelam district, of which Kel is part.

The 18-strong team was quickly dispatched to search for the soldiers at the outpost, which is 130 kilometres (80 miles) from Pakistan-administered Kashmir's main town of Muzaffarabad, he said.

Separatist violence has fallen in Muslim-majority, heavily militarised Kashmir, but occasional gunfights still erupt between militants and security forces.

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://www.google.com/hostednews/afp/article/ALeqM5i_wcaMiVzSMe2B3Rvc1fStJG-ERw?docId=CNG.0aa0fa5f64f9275cd7425e38b7275970.371

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Update: At least 32 killed as plane hits houses in Congo

A cargo plane crashed into houses near Brazzaville Maya-Maya airport while attempting to land in a thunderstorm on Friday, killing at least 32 people, a Congolese Red Cross official said on Saturday.

"We have already pulled 32 bodies from the crash site, but there could be more victims," the official said, asking not to be named. The official said the dead included six crew members.

The Soviet-made Ilyushin-76 cargo plane, operated by local carrier Trans Air Congo was travelling from Pointe-Noire, the commercial capital of the Central African state. It crashed into more than a dozen houses near the airport.

Congo Republic, like its neighbour the Democratic Republic of Congo and many countries in the region, has one of the world's poorest aviation safety records due to poor maintenance and the use of old planes banned from other skies.

In March 2011, another Soviet-made Antonov cargo plane, operated by the same company, crashed into houses in Pointe-Noire while attempting to land, killing 23.

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2012/12/01/uk-congo-republic-crash-idUKBRE8B006520121201

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31 bodies exhumed at Sibenik cemetery

Remains of 31 persons were exhumed at the city cemetery in Sibenik, Croatia, on Friday, and samples were taken for DNA analysis, the Serbian government's Commission on Missing Persons has said.

The exhumation, which was carried out by competent bodies of the Republic of Croatia, lasted for three days.

It was determined that 13 persons, who lost their lives in the same circumstances, were exhumed at the location earlier on individual requests of families.

The exhumation at the Sibenik cemetery is a continuation of the process of investigation of graves in north Dalmatia, where the victims of Croatian Operation Storm were buried.

The process was launched in 2001 at the city cemetery in Knin, where 301 bodies have been exhumed so far, and 250 identified and handed over to the families that have been searching for their beloved ones for years.

The exhumation was attended by President of Commission on Missing Persons Veljko Odalovic and Serbian Ambassador in Zagreb Stanimir Vukcevic.

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://www.tanjug.rs/news/67956/31-bodies-exhumed-at-sibenik-cemetery.htm?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter

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Landslide kills three troops; 18 rescuers missing

A landslide killed three Pakistani soldiers in the high mountains of Kashmir on Friday and 18 people sent to rescue them were missing after being hit by a second landslip, officials said.

A military rescue operation swung into action after heavy snows triggered the accident at a remote outpost in the Kel area of Azad Kashmir near the Line of Control.

The bodies of the three soldiers had been recovered but rescuers were still searching for the eight soldiers and 10 civilians from the search party caught in the second landslide, local official Raja Saqib Majeed said.

“We hope that rescue workers will find some of them alive. Let’s hope for the best,” he said, but added that efforts were being hampered by continued bad weather.

In April, about 140 soldiers were buried when a huge wall of snow crashed into the Siachen Glacier base. They have all been declared dead, although some of the bodies remain buried.

In Friday’s accident, the first landslide hit in the early hours, said Mr Majeed, deputy commissioner of Neelam district, of which Kel is part.

The 18-strong team was quickly dispatched to search for them at the site, which is 130km from Muzaffarabad, he said. But he added that “another landslide hit this rescue party and they were buried under it”

Saturday 1 December 2012

http://dawn.com/2012/12/01/landslide-kills-three-troops-18-rescuers-missing/

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