Thursday, 20 March 2014

At least nine killed in train crash in southern Turkey


At least nine people were killed and five others injured after a passenger train crashed Thursday into a minibus that was carrying workers to a factory.

Basri Guzeloglu, the local governor, said the train slammed into the vehicle at a level crossing near the Mediterranean port city of Mersin.

All the dead were in the vehicle. Three of the injured were said to be in a serious condition.

Guzeloglu said the cause of the accident would be investigated, but media reports suggested a signaling fault that saw the crossing's barrier arms up at the time of the accident.

No one aboard the train, traveling from the southern city of Adana to Mersin, was hurt.

Dogan news agency video footage of the scene showed the mangled wreckage of the vehicle lying near the tracks.

Thursday 20 March 2014

http://abcnews.go.com/International/wireStory/killed-train-accident-turkey-22980467

continue reading

Wednesday, 19 March 2014

1 dead, 8 missing after Tokyo ship collision


Freighter vessel Beagle III collided with the boxship Pegasus Prime and sank at the mouth of Tokyo Bay on 17th of March, 2014.

According to initial information 1 crew member, from Chinese origin is in critical condition and another 8 are still missing.

Beagle III, a 12,630 GT, Panama-registered cargo ship loaded with steel coil sank after she collided with Pegasus Prime, a 7,406 GT South Korea-registered container carrier in the Urga waterway. The collision between both ships occurred at 3:10 local time (UTC6:10 p.m.) on Monday at the mouth of Tokyo Bay in Japan.

Japanese Coast Guard spokesperson informed there were 20 crew members aboard Beagle III at the time of the collision with Pegasus Prime. Twelve were safely rescued by the coast guard, but one of them has been stated to be in a cardio-respiratory arrest. The spokesperson also added that 8 other crew members were still missing.

It's known that "cardio-respiratory arrest" is a term, usually ussed from the rescue staff in Japan before medics officially pronounce death.

Nineteen patrol vessels and 2 helicopters were initially dispatched at the place of the collision between Beagle III and Pegasus Prime to conduct a search and rescue operation for the missing 8 crew members. The Japanese Coast Guard spokesperson said rescuers were searching 9 hours after the collision.

At the time of the accident, there were 8 crew members from Myanmar and 6 South Koreans aboard the collided container ship Pegasus Prime. Two of the South Korean crew members sustained minor injuries when they tried to lower a lifeboat at water, but others were in good condition.

According to the Japanese Coast Guard, the sea was in calm at the time of the collision between Pegasus Prime and Beagle III.

UPDATE: South China Morning Post released information that Chinese Embassy in Japan sent a briefing regarding the collision of Pegasus Prime and Beagle III to an officer on duty at China Search and Rescue Centre located in Beijing, but they decided not to send a rescue boat due to the sensitivity of the location.

Wednesday 19 March 2014

http://www.maritime-executive.com/article/1-Dead-8-Missing-After-Tokyo-Collision-2014-03-18/

continue reading

Tuesday, 18 March 2014

1942: TWA Flight 3 - Movie star Lombard and 21 passengers die in plane crash


Within a few hundred yards of the top of Double Up Peak, 11 miles north of Goodsprings, Nevada, a doughty band of six searchers found the missing TWA plane which crashed at 7:30 last evening, carrying movie star Carole Lombard and 15 army pilots to their death.

The ship apparently failed to clear the crest by a short distance, crashed and fell back down the mountainside some 450 yards, where it was found in three feet of snow at 10:30 this morning by searchers who went in from Goodsprings.

The party was led in by Lyle Van Gordon, former high school football star, who saw the crash last night and the subsequent fire, marked the spot and was waiting for the group when it arrived early this morning from Las Vegas.

Deputy Sheriff Jack Moore, Robert B. Griffith, George Bondley, Jack Hart and Otto Swartz comprised the party, which left at daybreak on foot and climbed straight up the mountain to the scene of the tragedy.

They spent only a short time there, left Hart and Bondley to guard the wreckage and returned to Las Vegas to report their findings and organize a party to return and bring out the bodies.

The 19 passengers aboard and members of the crew were apparently all instantly killed, their bodies strewn over an area several hundred yards in diameter. The ship was completely demolished.

There was no theory at all as to the possible cause of the disaster, for the pilot apparently flew into the mountain which is only 7,500 feet in height and nothing of an obstacle to the big Douglas transport ship.

The army pilots aboard were returning from Albuquerque (N.M.), where they had just ferried several planes to the new bomber base.

Miss Lombard, her mother and press agent were returning to Hollywood after a trip to Indianapolis to open a drive for the sale of defense bonds.

The Goodsprings party was the only one operating from that side of the mountain but there were more than 100 searchers on the Blue Diamond side.

Immediately rescue crews were organized in Las Vegas, ambulances were sent out, army officers and soldiers, sheriff’s deputies, police officers, firemen and volunteers started out, warmly dressed for the long hard search over the rough terrain.

Clem Malone, city employee, reported that he got within perhaps a half a mile of the burning plane but was stopped by a deep chasm.



He traveled on the old Potosi mine road as far as he could by car, then went on foot for the rest of the way.

Elevation of the mountain where the plane crashed is about 8,000 feet and heavy snow is reported on the ground there. The mountain stands about 4,000 feet above the surrounding terrain.

One of the first searching parties out last night was Jack Larry, John F. Cahlan, news editor for the Review-Journal; James H. Down, Jr., advertising manager for the Review-Journal; Tweed Wilson, old-time Indian resident of the area; A. McKnight, rancher and Woody Pierce, police officer of Las Vegas.

Pierce returned to his police duties early this morning, and the others set out on horses furnished by McKnight and the Wilson ranch to pursue the search.

Only a short time later, G.C. “Buck” Blaine, Dan Campbell and R.R. Russell arrived at the scene with their horses and started the search. They were joined by many others whose names were not reported there, all intent on locating the missing ship and passengers for whom little hope was held.

Major H.W. Anderson, executive officer at the army air corps gunnery school, Major Paul Holtz and about 25 soldiers joined in the search last night and today both on the ground and in the air.

Clark Gable arrived in Las Vegas at 1 o’clock this morning by plane after receiving word at the Burbank airport that the ship was missing. He was accompanied by a party of close friends and business associates who included Eddie Mannix, William Streeter and Howard Strickling.



TWA and army planes flew over the area from early this morning until the ship was located. A party of TWA and CAA officials came to Las Vegas to join in the search.

Las Vegas was the center of the news interest in the nation last night and today as long distance telephone calls from press associations and newspapers poured in from Los Angeles, Salt Lake City, Chicago and New York. The plane crash story was a “flash” on the wire of the United Press whenever a new report was sent out and this story took precedence over all others.

One or more reporters and photographers came to Las Vegas from Southern California to represent the United Press, Associated Press and International News Service.

The peace officers of Clark County and Las Vegas joined with the volunteers in conducting the search with CAA and army officials.

Frank Caldwell of the investigation section of the civil aeronautics board’s safety bureau came to Las Vegas to investigate the TWA liner’s crash. Two air safety investigators, W.E. Carey of Santa Monica, California, and Perry Hodgeden of San Francisco, were ordered to the scene.

The pilot of the TWA liner, which left its starting point at LaGuardia airport in New York City at 10 p.m. Thursday, was W.C. Williams. His co-pilot was Morgan A. Gillette and the hostess was Miss Alice F. Getz.

The plane took off from the Las Vegas airport after stopping for fuel. It was learned that the plane had intended to land at Boulder City but was unable to do so because of the lack of lighting at the field. It then came to Las Vegas, refueled, took off again and flew on the course toward Los Angeles.

Seven minutes later, it broke its radio contact with the Las Vegas control station without explanation and the crash is believed to have occurred about 20 minutes later.

Following is a list of passengers aboard the airliner which crashed near here last night: Corporal MB. Affrine, air corps; Second Lieutenant James C. Burham, air corps; Sergeant A. M. Belejekak, air corps; Second Lieutenant Hal E. Browne, Jr., air corps; Sergeant Frederick P. Cook, aircorps; First Lieutenant Robert E. Croch, air corps; Frederick J. Dittman, air corps, rank undetermined; Second Lieutenant K. T. Donaahue, aircorps; Mrs. Clark Gable (Carole Lombard), Hollywood; Lois Hamilton, Detroit, Michigan; First Lieutenant Robert F. Negren, air corps; Sergeant Edgar A. Negren, air corps (brother of Lieutenant Negren); Second Lieutenant Charles D. Nelson, air corps; Mrs. Elizabeth K. Peters (Mrs. Gable’s mother), Hollywood; Second Lieutenant Stuart L. Swenson, air corps; Private Martin W. Tellrank, air corps; Sergeant David C. Tilgman, air corps; Private Nicholas Varsamine, air corps; Otto Winkler, movie press agent, Hollywood. Crew members: Pilot Wayne C. Williams; co-pilot Morgan A. Gillette and Hostess Alice F. Getz.

Tuesday 18 March 2014

http://www.rgj.com/article/20140318/LIV/303180015/From-1942-Lombard-pilots-die-plane-crash?nclick_check=1

continue reading

Four ways to repair the Pentagon’s effort to ID the missing


Last week, we wrote about the Pentagon’s efforts to find and identify the 83,000 service members missing from past conflicts – of which the military ID’d just 60 last year. As our story laid out, the mission has been hampered by outdated scientific methods, a lack of public outreach and cumbersome bureaucracy.

Lawmakers and Pentagon leadership have zeroed on the overlapping agencies and lack of clear chain of command in the mission. Last month, Secretary of Defense Chuck Hagel ordered a review of how the military manages the effort.

But streamlining the structure won’t be enough, many outside experts say. Here are four ideas to really fix the effort.

Overhaul use of DNA

The main agency involved is the Joint Prisoner of War/Missing in Action Accounting Command, which runs the forensics laboratory used to identify the remains of the missing. J-PAC starts with historical and medical records first and leaves DNA last.

That’s backwards from all other modern day efforts to identify the missing, which begin the process with DNA and let that powerful tool lead the process. Using DNA as the primary identification method was used in Argentina after the dirty war, in the Balkans after the genocide there, and here in the United States after 9/11 and Hurricane Katrina.

If changes don’t bring the methods up to date with the latest forensics techniques, Ed Huffine, a DNA expert, said, “The system will still fail.”

Another issue is the type of DNA J-PAC uses. It relies on mitochondrial DNA, which is passed down from the mother and is consistent along the maternal line for generations. A grandmother shares the same mitochondrial DNA with her daughter and her daughter’s children, for example.

But other scientists involved in identifying the missing stopped using maternal DNA almost 20 years ago. Instead, in places like Argentina and Bosnia, scientists use nuclear DNA, which can be compared to the mother, father, children and siblings of the person to make a positive ID. It’s also faster and cheaper to process than mitochondrial DNA.

In Bosnia, they would extract DNA from a bone on a Monday, sequence the DNA on a Tuesday and do any necessary troubleshooting by the end of the week, said Huffine, who helped designed the effort in Bosnia. For the Pentagon, similar DNA processing often takes months.

Since J-PAC works decades-old cases, scientists would face times when nuclear DNA samples from immediate family might not be available. In those cases J-PAC must rely on maternal DNA, using, for example, the DNA from a missing soldier’s niece. But here too, experts say, J-PAC could make better use of DNA.

J-PAC won’t rely on maternal DNA to make an ID, because it can be shared across different families. However, even the most common mitochondrial DNA is only shared by 5 percent of the population – meaning J-PAC could be 95 percent sure of the person’s identity when using it, according to Joshua Hyman of the University of Wisconsin. He and others argue that DNA is the strongest and fastest place to start an ID, regardless of the type, rather than leaving it last in the equation.

Family samples of maternal DNA could also be combined with samples of paternal DNA to make a match. J-PAC should request all the different types of DNA to be sequenced at once.

Do a national, high-profile outreach campaign to collect needed DNA samples for WWII – before it’s too late.

Siblings are among the best DNA matches for WWII missing service members, especially if the MIAs had no children. That generation is dying. The Pentagon could enlist the help of Hollywood – Tom Hanks and Steven Spielberg have been suggested – to publicize a massive effort to collect as many DNA reference samples from family of the missing. TV ads, social media, radio and YouTube videos and more could all be used to solicit participation. The U.S. government has actually given Argentina millions of dollars in grants to do just that.

The more samples for a missing service member are on hand the easier it is to make a match.

“Given that close relatives of WWII soldiers are older, how long are we going to wait to collect their DNA? They represent the best opportunity to find a match,” Hyman said. “Are we just waiting for the issue to go away, assuming that when they die there will be no one left that cares enough to cause a fuss?”

Do massive disinterments of 9,400 unknown service members to try to identify with DNA

More than 9,400 service members from WWII and the Korean War are buried as “unknowns” in American cemeteries around the world because of the limitations of science at the time. But many of them could now likely be identified if the Pentagon exhumed the remains for DNA testing.

“Seems to me like the logical approach,” Clyde Snow, a world-renowned forensic anthropologist said.

With the copious records the U.S. military has, the unknowns could be broken down into like groups from theater, battle or event, and dug up accordingly to keep it manageable.

In order to be both efficient and respectful of the remains, scientists say the bodies could be left in place and tested using a mobile DNA unit and then housed in a mausoleum while DNA cross referencing is done.

Embrace outside help

Experts say about 45,000 MIAs are recoverable, likely an overwhelming task for any one organization or agency. So some people formerly involved in the effort have suggested enlisting universities, historical organizations, military unit associations, veterans and other interested groups.

At J-PAC’s sister agency, the Defense Prisoner of War/Missing Personnel Office, there was an idea floated of building regional centers that could be responsible for researching and building cases on the missing from their area. That would tap into a pool of people who care deeply about those who are missing, building “a cadre of people who are focused towards the mission in manageable chunks,” said Navy Commander Renee Richardson, formerly of DPMO.

“We’d be leveraging all the things universities already do,” said Richardson. “If you go to a university, let’s say Harvard, and tell them, ‘from your class of ‘37, you still have three people missing from WWII.’”

This would require much more openness with records and findings than the Pentagon has been willing to share in the past, Richardson said.

In the search for remains – the hardest task of the mission – locals can often help. There are Belgians, for example, who live near the Battle of the Bulge and have long worked to find missing American soldiers. They have the a dvantage of speaking the native language and being a part of the community, but are often shunned by the Pentagon.

Anthropologists have also suggested outsourcing overseas archaeological operations for continuity and efficiency. Rather than flying scientists from Hawaii to spend a few weeks looking for remains in, say, Papua New Guinea, there could be a team stationed there. Their work would be continuous rather than filled with the time lags of sometimes years between digs that hinders J-PAC’s efforts.

Tuesday 18 March 2014

http://newpittsburghcourieronline.com/2014/03/18/four-ways-to-really-fix-the-pentagons-effort-to-id-the-missing/

continue reading

Seven migrants drown trying to reach Greece, 2 missing


The Greek Coast Guard recovered the bodies of seven migrants, including two children, who drowned in the Aegean Sea after trying to reach the Greek island of Lesvos from Turkey on a plastic rowboat, officials said on Tuesday.

Another eight migrants were rescued and two were missing, according to a spokeswoman for the Merchant Marine Ministry who said a Turkish cargo ship spotted two of the survivors in the early hours of Tuesday morning and informed the Greek authorities. “The migrants told the Turkish crew their boat had capsized and the Turks alerted us.”

The nationalities of the migrants were not immediately known.

A Greek Navy rescue helicopter and five Coast Guard vessels searched the sea between Lesvos and Turkey for signs of the missing. A Greek cargo ship and a passenger ferry joined the search later in the day.

It was unclear how the migrants’ boat capsized, the official said, noting that weather conditions at sea had been very good. She did not confirm local reports describing the migrants as Syrian.

Greece remains a major transit country for migrants from poor or war-torn nations seeking a better life in the European Union. Athens has repeatedly appealed for help in handling a seemingly relentless influx. Hundreds of people attempt to reach the Greek islands from Turkey in boats that are often overloaded and unseaworthy.

In January, 12 people drowned when a boat carrying immigrants from Afghanistan and Syria overturned near Farmakonisi, another island in the Aegean. The incident occurred while the migrants’ fishing boat was being towed by a Greek Coast Guard vessel, drawing condemnation by international human rights groups and triggering an investigation by a Greek prosecutor.

Last month, the European Union’s border protection agency Frontex said the number of migrants entering the bloc illegally rose 48 percent in 2013 compared with the previous year.

Tuesday 18 March 2014

http://www.nytimes.com/2014/03/19/world/europe/migrants-drowned-trying-to-reach-greece.html?_r=0

continue reading

Monday, 17 March 2014

Typhoon Yolanda (Haiyan) death toll at 6.268


Twenty three more unidentified bodies were recovered from Eastern Visayas, five months after typhoon Yolanda ravaged the area, bringing the death toll to 6,268, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council said on Saturday. The agency said that the 23 bodies (1, Guiaun, 8, Barauen, Eastern Samar: Carigara-3, Dagami-6, Dulag-3 and Magta-Ob-2, all in Leyte province) were all recovered Friday. It said that the missing persons at the height of Yolanda’s fury rose to 1,061 from the previous count of 1,039. The latest NDRRMC posting is part of its 107th situational report of Yolanda’s effect, saying that the injured victims climbed to 28,689 from 28,626 with an additional 63. Leyte had the highest fatalities at 5, 370. The NDRRMC posting also showed the death toll in other areas hit by typhoon Yolanda (19 in Palawan; 2 in Quezon; 1 each in Batangas, Albay, Camarines Norte, Bohol and Zamboanga City; 179 in Iloilo; 4 in Masbate; 14 Aklan; 86 in Capiz; 13 in Antique; 2 in Negros Occidental; 73 in Cebu; 267 in Eastern Samar; 5,370 in Leyte; 225 in Samar and 8 in Biliran). Monday 17 March 2014 http://manilastandardtoday.com/2014/03/16/yolanda-deaths-6-268-and-counting/

continue reading

Sunday, 16 March 2014

The eerie case of 1977's Flight 653


Thirty-seven years ago, a Malaysia Airlines jet was hijacked and the ensuing crash, presumably due to a fight between the plane's crew and a terrorist, was so violent no intact bodies were ever found.

Malaysia Airlines Flight 653 had departed Penang, Malaysia on its way to Kuala Lumpur on a Sunday morning. As the plane descended, a lone terrorist believed to be a member of the Japanese Red Army, a militant communist group, hijacked the Boeing 737. The crew immediately reported the hijacking to air traffic controllers.

According to reports from the Aviation Safety Network, the hijacker demanded to be flown to Singapore. While exactly what happened next isn't clear, it's believed the hijacker shot both pilots and then himself en route to Singapore, presumably during a fight.

"The cockpit voice recordings indicate noises suggestive of the cockpit door being broken in, along with a reasonable amount of screaming and cursing. No noises are heard from within the cockpit to indicate any of the three occupants were conscious. The autopilot was then disconnected, possibly due to a pitch input by someone entering the cockpit and trying to control the aircraft. An investigator speculated that someone pulled back on the column, causing a pitch up, followed by an oscillation," and rapid dive, Aviation Safety Network reports.



It was around this time the plane fell off radar screens and all efforts to reestablish radio contract failed.

Later, a crash was reported by villagers near a Malaysian swamp. Rescue personnel at the swamp found a horrific scene of charred debris and bodies and experts later said the plane hit the ground at a near vertical angle.

All 100 people on board were killed; the collision was so violent no intact bodies were found.

All recovered remains were x-rayed in an attempt to discover evidence of a projectile or weapon. No weapon or bullet was ever found.

The victims' remains were later interred in a mass burial and a memorial was placed at the site.

The Japanese Red Army never claimed responsibility for the crash and conspiracy theories over what really happened abounded.

Sunday 16 March 2014

http://blog.al.com/breaking/2014/03/all_on_hijacked_malaysian_jet.html

continue reading

Forensics expert says Yolanda death toll could reach 18,000


More than 18,000 lives may have been lost during typhoon “Yolanda,” according to forensic pathologist Raquel Fortun of the University of the Philippines Manila.

“The casualties could surpass that of Fukushima which claimed 18,000 lives,” she said.

“Yolanda claimed over 18,000, probably tens of thousands,” she told Malaya Business Insight. “That’s my gut feeling.”

The victims “may have died in whole families, meaning, nobody was left to report the missing and the dead,” she said in a scientific conference on emergency health management convened by the Philippine Council for Health Research and Development, Department of Science and Technology.

The running official record stands at some 6,200 dead and at least 1,000 missing. The toll could surpass that from the magnitude 9 earthquake off Fukushima in Japan in March 2011, which claimed some 18,000 lives.

“If you ask me, Yolanda claimed more,” Fortun said. “In disasters, you can’t recover all.”

Fortun was in Tacloban when the typhoon hit in November last year. She brought what order she could in the identification and proper burial of fatalities.

As a forensic pathologist, Fortun is a medical doctor trained to perform autopsies and postmortem examinations to determine cause of death.

Fortun knows what she speaks of. She was at the Ozone Disco Club in Quezon City after it was razed by fire before midnight in March 1996. The fire claimed at least 162 lives, the worst fire in Philippine history and among the 10 worst nightclub fires in the world.

Fortun was also at an orphanage in Manila after it was hit by a fire in December 1998, killing 29 children. And she was in Payatas, Quezon City, in July 2000 shortly after a mountain of trash buried more than 300 people alive in a landslide.

So, has forensic pathology improved since? “Yes, we now have body bags; that’s about it,” Fortun said.

In Yolanda’s wake, the problems were just too “enormous” in the confusion that followed. Fortun was able to bring some order to the burial of body bags so that, when future identification is required, individual graves can be traced.

In Tacloban, together with a physician and three morticians, Fortun opened body bags one by one, systematically tagging them. It was Day 2 and decomposition was starting.

“I don’t think there was a systematic gathering of the dead, they were picking up bodies as they found them,” she said.

She showed photos to physicians who attended her lecture on disaster victim identification. “Remember, this is minus the stench.”

EVERYTHING EXCEPT AN ID

She said there were a lot of wallets containing money, SIM cards and many other things – except identification cards. “If you’re anticipating a disaster, carry an ID.” Her team found a lot of cellphones and these will be useful as they can be traced, she said.

And “the bodies kept coming,” said Fortun as she gave an overview of where current forensic science is. “The Philippines has no death investigation system,” she said simply.

That’s the bad news, she said. The good news was, “we knew Yolanda was coming. I was already counting bodies in my mind,” she said. “And we can now do DNA identification.”

“In a disaster, it’s critical that you have pre-planning. You must have provisions for the collection, accommodation, examination and disposal of the dead in large numbers,” she said.

Mass disaster management is a health issue, she said, and should be handled by the Department of Health and not by the National Bureau of Investigation or the police.

‘PROPER CLOSURE’

The number one forensic issue is the identification of the victims, she said, and law enforcers do not have the capability to establish the fact of death, identify the deceased, and determine the cause and manner of death. “They are not capable of handling mass identification.”

She said it is necessary to investigate deaths so that victims are declared legally dead and bodies officially released. This way, the surviving spouse, for example, can remarry or heirs can get the inheritance. And if the deceased has a criminal case, it becomes moot and academic.

“It is most important that DNA analysis provides proper closure for relatives of the dead, especially when emotions are high as in disasters,” said Dr. Maria Corazon A. De Ungria who heads the DNA Analysis Laboratory at the Natural Sciences Research Institute, UP Diliman.

The PCHRD is funding the laboratory’s two-year study – “Human DNA Forensic Analysis Procedures for Human Remains Identification” – that started January last year. Another two-year research funded by the PCHRD is the Human DNA Forensics Program to develop DNA procedures that would be useful in the formulation of a national forensics strategy.

Sunday 16 March 2014

http://www.malaya.com.ph/business-news/news/forensics-expert-says-yolanda-death-toll-could-reach-18000

continue reading

Six dead, six missing in Colombian torrential rain


At least six people have died, four were injured, six went missing and widespread material damage was inflicted by the torrential rains falling across a large part of Colombia, officials said.

The national emergency management service UNGRD said the count of victims is based on reports from seven provinces since Wednesday, the day when the rainy season began in this country, according to meteorologists.

Three of the fatalities were in Palmira and Cali in the southwestern province of Valle del Cauca, another was in Palermo in the southern province of Huila, and two were in Bucaramanga, capital of the northeastern province of Santander, where this Friday the bodies of two members of a family of four were recovered after their home was buried under a mudslide.

The other two mudslide victims in Bucaramanga’s 12 de Octubre neighborhood are still missing, as are another four people in Valle del Cauca.

UNGRD said that in Colombian territory, 17 emergencies have been reported, “including the avalanches, mudslides, high winds, storms, cresting rivers and floods” that have hit 16 municipalities, chiefly in the provinces of Huila, Santander, Valle del Cauca and Cundinamarca.

Besides the dead, injured and missing, the downpours have affected 58 family homes, of which six were totally destroyed and 52 suffered significant damage.

The national director of UNGRD, Carlos Ivan Marquez, visited Friday the Bucaramanga area, where the mudslide occurred that buried the family of four, to supervise search-and-rescue operations.

Marquez traveled Saturday to Palmira, Valle del Cauca, to check on the emergency situation caused by another mudslide in which four people went missing.

Sunday 16 March 2014

http://www.laht.com/article.asp?ArticleId=1777691&CategoryId=12393

continue reading

Ambiguous loss: Chinese families have death rituals disrupted by missing Malaysia flight


The vast majority of the 239 people on board Malaysia Airlines Flight 370 were Chinese or ethnic Chinese, and for them, in a culture that treasures ancestors and the rituals surrounding the passage of life into death, the possibility that no bodies may be found is excruciating.

“It’s horrible, just horrible,” said Joy Chen, cultural icon and author of the popular Chinese-language book, “Do Not Marry Before 30,” who commutes between Los Angeles and her “second home” in Beijing.

“In Chinese culture, the living and dead are part of the same family,” said Chen, 44. “There is such a strong sense of family. You are separated from your ancestor, but they are still a part of you.”

International authorities still don't know exactly what happened to the Boeing 777, which disappeared on March 8, local time, en route from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing. Conspiracy theories -– from terrorism to a potential hijacking or even pilot suicide –- have fueled the rumors as families wait for news.

Malaysia Airlines has said at least 152 of the passengers were Chinese. And their families are faced with the likelihood that centuries-old cultural traditions of funeral and burial will be disrupted.

Chen, who is Chinese-American, said that the holiday Quing Ming –- returning to “sweep the grave” of a family member -- is an important ritual that would be next to impossible without the presence of a body.

When Chen’s family moved from Maryland, they embarked on a complicated effort to disinter and move her decade-old deceased grandmother to the West Coast. They also moved her grandfather’s body from Taipei.

“My generation of the family thought, ‘Leave her alone,’ but my parents had joined me in the West and it was more difficult for them to do the sweeping of the grave,” she said. The family legally fought the State of Maryland, which claimed it was a public health hazard, and eventually had her grandmother cremated and flown to California. “She belonged to us, God rest her soul. It was pretty amazing.”

Not knowing where the plane is –- if it has landed in some remote location and passengers may have survived –- is equally disturbing in East and West.

“The hardest thing for human beings to deal with is the unknown,” said Ann Rosen Spector, a clinical psychologist from Philadelphia who specializes in grief. “If you look at science, religion or logic, it’s about explaining the unknown. We always want to complete the circle. It’s like a scab is ripped off every time another piece of information takes away the hope.”

“They don’t have any place to put their anger or pain and keep getting the hope that something else will happen, a miracle to undead the person," Spector said.

For Chinese families, the prospect of funerals without bodies is incomprehensible, according to Chen. “When person first dies it’s incredibly important to have a body,” she said. “You have a wake for a whole day or more. The body is cleaned and dressed up in their best clothes and all the friends and relatives come around to pay respects. Then after that, there is a funeral procession and everyone goes to the grave site.”

In China, grieving families even hire professional wailers to join in the funeral procession. At the grave, families burn paper money so their dead family member has money to spend in the afterlife.

“That’s why it is so horrible,” she said of not having a body to bury. “Because in Chinese tradition, death is not just the end of a person’s life, they are going to another world and the family continues to maintain our relations with our ancestors. We live among them all the time and even seek their help.”

The Malaysia Airlines incident increases a sense of disruption and insecurity. “There is no sense of certainty,” said Chen. “You haven’t had the opportunity to pay respects from the passing of this world to the world of the dead. You don’t get to acknowledge and respect their passage into the afterlife.”

Sunday 16 March 2014

http://abcnews.go.com/Health/chinese-families-death-rituals-disrupted-missing-malaysia-flight/story?id=22919995&singlePage=true

continue reading

Saturday, 15 March 2014

2 killed in boat collision off Cavite, 9 still missing


Two persons were killed when two boats collided off Cavite waters late Wednesday night, belated reports from authorities said.

As of posting time Friday, joint search and rescue team of police, coast guard, marine corps, maritime, and Cavite disaster risk reduction and management council continued to scour the area of the collision as nine remained missing. One body was recovered and 12 fishermen were rescued.

Regional Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (RDRRMC) chairman and Office of Civil Defense (OCD) Calabarzon regional director Vicente F. Tomazar told PNA F/B Dan Israel collided with an unidentified vessel about 11 p.m. Wednesday off the coast of Ternate and Caballo Island, Cavite City.

He said the unidentified boat remained at large as of press time.

Tomazar said the Philippine Marines and American soldiers took time off from their joint Lantern Piston exercises at its Marine Base Command in Ternate to join in the search and rescue operations until 3 p.m.

Citing survivors’ account, authorities said a container ship with wide freeboard carrying container vans heading toward Manila Bay sped away after ramming the fishing vessel.

According to survivors’ account, their fishing vessel was anchored in the waters between Caballo and El Fraile Islands when the incident happened.

The two casualties were identified as fishermen of the ill-fated fishing vessel F/B Dan Israel that capsized after the collision.

Dela Cruz’s body was recovered by the Philippine Coast Guard-Search Operations Unit underwater.

The rescued 12 survivors, all crew of the ill-fated fishing boat, were brought to nearby Corregidor Island and later transferred to the Pantungan detachment in Maragondon, Cavite for first aid.

They were later moved to the Naic Medical Hospital for further treatment while Jojo Sumbilla’s body was brought to St. Gregory Funeral Parlor in Ternate, Cavite.

The Ternate Municipal DRRMO deployed two ambulances and rescue teams, Metro Manila Coast Guard sent BRP San Juan and BRP Davao del Norte, while the Philippine Air Force sent helicopters for the aerial search of the missing fishermen.

Saturday 15 March 2014

http://www.interaksyon.com/article/82755/2-killed-in-boat-collision-off-cavite-9-still-missing

continue reading

Friday, 14 March 2014

The mystery of Mont Blanc's hidden treasure


It's a plotline that wouldn't be out of place in a Tintin comic - a French Mayor, an alpine climber, a historian, a wealthy Jewish stone merchant from London, and their tenuous connections to a bag of lost jewels discovered on the peak of Mont Blanc.

The trail begins early on 24 January 1966, as Air India Flight 101 starts its descent towards Geneva Airport. The pilot had miscalculated the aircraft's altitude and the Boeing 707 was heading directly for the summit of Mont Blanc, France's highest mountain.

All 117 people on board were killed as the plane crashed. "It made a huge crater in the mountain," a mountain guide who was first to reach the scene was quoted as saying. "Everything was completely pulverised. Nothing was identifiable except for a few letters and packets."

Various rescue attempts to recover bodies and debris were called off because of bad weather on the summit. Many remnants from the aircraft - including a bag of diplomatic mail and a wheel hub - have been gathered in the years since the tragedy, but pieces of twisted metal still lie in the peak's nooks and crannies.

It took half a century, however, for the crash site to reveal its biggest secret.

Among the burning wreckage that was scattered across a glacier, a small case packed full of 100 precious emeralds, sapphires and rubies was flung through the air and swallowed into the ice.

The box, which two families are claiming had their name embossed into the side, sank into the glacier, only reappearing 47 years later clutched in the hands of a local climber as he strolled into the local gendarmerie.

The gendarmes heralded the climber's decision not to keep his find, with an estimated value of 246,000 euros (£205,000).

"You can see, he is very honest," said chief gendarme Sylvain Merly. "He was a mountaineer… and he didn't want to keep something that belonged to someone who'd died."

Merly took the jewels straight to the mayor of Chamonix, who stored them in a vault below the town hall until the media were told.

When the story came to light, journalists began to scramble for more details - at one point printing a photo of a mountain guide, Stephane Dan, with what appeared to be the jewels in front of him. In fact they were stones he snapped from gullies and sold for 20 euros each.

"It could have been me who found the real thing," he laments. "I climb all summer, collecting the best pieces of mineral to sell. I found many pieces of the aeroplane. I once found wheels. I found a special bottle used for coffee with Air India written on it. I even found the altimeter used for the plane."

Bizarrely, this was the second Air India crash in the same area. Sixteen years earlier another plane, a Constellation known as the Malabar Princess, had gone down on the mountain, also on its approach to Geneva. So the wreckage of two aircraft is scattered over the area.

Dan said the local rumour was that the climber who discovered the bag of jewels was from Bourg-Saint Maurice, a village three hours' drive from Chamonix. "We all heard it was happening, but it was a mystery. Now we know it was a real - but even I don't know who it was."

At this point, I started making attempts to film the jewels. But Sylvain Merly said he was no longer allowed to discuss the story with journalists, directing me to the prefect of the department of Savoie, in Annecy.

The prefect's office said they had nothing to do with the investigation and shunted me on to Francois Bouquin, head of the mayor's office in Chamonix. Bouquin said the Mayor's office was no longer responsible for leading the enquiry, pointing me to the court of Bonneville.

The court of Bonneville directed me to the court of Albertville, which, confused, sent me back to Bouquin - who said, in hindsight, he wasn't sure which courthouse was in charge.

After repeated calls and many hours spent on hold listening to Mozart's violin concertos, I pointed out to Bouquin that I had spoken to everyone he suggested. Then he finally gave an answer: "I don't want to have to tell you 'No'. But you cannot see the stones. At this time, it is a question of security. We are handling our own investigation into the case. We do not feel the media are useful or necessary at this time."

I was, however, able to persuade him to send me two pictures of what he called the "treasure", in the hands of the mayor, albeit wrapped in thick, white police tape.

"It's so French, this story," says Francoise Rey, a local historian and author of Crash au Mont Blanc, a book about the two Air India accidents. "You ask to see the stones and they send you a photo of them in a bag."

An acquaintance of the mayor, Rey went to lunch with him and sat discussing a viewing of the treasure. But she, like so many others, drew a blank.

Rey is convinced that the mayor and the climber struck a 50-50 deal long before they told journalists about the jewels' existence. Under French law, there is a window of two years, she says.

"If no owner is found by then, one half will go to the Mayor of Chamonix and the other half goes to the climber.

"I am quite sure they are interested in keeping the stones and that they will do nothing whatsoever to help the families or the owner to prove they are theirs."

Fournier downplayed the allure of the jewels, she says, to dampen her interest. "He told me the stones are not so beautiful, and voila. They played the game that they were more embarrassed with them than happy, that's the impression they wanted to give."

Fournier, who is currently campaigning for local elections, was not available to answer questions, so Bouquin spoke on his behalf. "The suggestion we struck a deal a deal is completely mad. There is no deal. We don't even know who found the stones. There is a law and a procedure that must be followed, and that is all."

Back in 1990, while Rey was researching her book, she was given access to a criminal dossier compiled by the local court of Bonneville, which contained many of the documents collated after the accident.

Looking through her notes, Mrs Rey made an amazing discovery. Annotated within the pages are the details of an insurance document making a claim for lost jewels destined for one man, who lived in London.

She had taken down the name of the family: Issacharoff.

Unfortunately, though, she failed to write down the claimant's initial. "I saw the letter. I don't have it, but I saw it. I have written in my notes the name of the person who was waiting for the stones in London. I am sure there are many more details in this letter. The main thing to do is to go back to find this letter. But this is proving very difficult."

Since the dossier will not be opened to the public for 75 years, gaining access to the archive means a lengthy application process - one that Rey has only just began. How long it will take, she says, she doesn't know.

A quick internet search reveals the Issacharoff family to be one of the largest, oldest stone merchants in the UK. A family business started by the Russian-Jewish family in 1930, the Issacharoffs have become the largest

I call them on the telephone. "The parcel is ours," Avi Issacharoff, head of Henig Diamonds, says instantly. "Please come to our offices and I will talk you through the details."

A diminutive, black-suited businessman, Avi is found behind various armoured doors, in the depths of the diamond district of London's Hatton Garden. He says he can recall his father talking about the accident, and the family's collective relief that no relatives were on the plane when it hit the mountain. Normally when the family made a purchase of this size, one of them would go to pick it up in person, he says.

Grandson of Ruben and son of David, Avi is third in a line of directors of the business. His father, while still alive, suffers from dementia and can no longer recall the exact details. "We consulted our lawyers, but they told us we had no chance. We don't have records dating back 50 years. The only way we can prove the parcel was ours is that we know our name would have been written on the package."

The London-based Issacharoff family are not the only claimants to the jewels. Another set of Issacharoffs from Spain - no relation, but apparently also stone merchants - are reportedly approaching the French authorities in an attempt to gain access to the letter that Francoise Rey speaks about.

Bouquin, of the Mayor's office, says he has seen the packaging in which the stones were found, but it is not necessarily possible to make out a name from it.

"Maybe we might be able to identify the name on the parcel, but it is very hard to see. It has been 50 years beneath the ice."

Meanwhile, the days and months are ticking by.

Friday 14 March 2014

https://www.blogger.com/blogger.g?blogID=3169324430853717798#editor/target=post;postID=2827642974417361845

continue reading

1994 American Eagle Flight 4184 crash in Roselawn


At 3:56 p.m. on Halloween in 1994, a small commuter plane took off from Indianapolis on a 168-mile trip to Chicago carrying 64 passengers. The plane was a French-made ATR 72 twin-engine turboprop with a four-person crew.

At 4:13 p.m. the pilot radioed he was ready to begin descent at O'Hare, but controllers put him in a holding pattern because too many planes were trying to land and heavy rain was slowing everything down. American Eagle Flight 4184 would have to wait its turn.

At 5 pm. the tower instructed the pilot to descend to 8,000 to begin another holding pattern. But as he did so the plane suddenly lurched to the right. Both pilots fought for control of the plane and briefly righted it, but it lurched again, this time rolling over and diving at full speed directly at the ground. Flight 4184 was gone from the sky in seconds.

The crash site was a soybean field near Roselawn in Newton County, Indiana. Emergency crews rushed to the scene, but quickly realized there was nothing to be done. "There were no lives to save, no fires to put out," one of the first responders later said. And it was silent.

The crash had torn the plane into so many small pieces it was hard to tell where all of it was. From the air they could see only a few large pieces of wreckage, a small impact crater and tiny pieces of debris spread out behind it in a trail stretching about two city blocks.

The farmer who tended the soybeans heard about the crash on the radio and went out looking. When he saw how little was left of the plane he thought: "There's got to be bodies out there."

It was a gruesome night as rescuers slogged through the mud in a driving rain, and they knew their mission had changed from rescuing survivors to gathering body parts. The next morning they brought in gravel to make a 200-yard road out into the muddy field in order to get vehicles out there.

It would take several days to reclaim the remains of the dead and weeks longer to identify them. The FBI sent in a special team to painstakingly identify as many body parts as possible so that proper burials and consecrations could be made.

The FBI's Disaster Squad was created after a similar crash in 1940 to bring the agency's expertise to bear in just this type of situation. In an age before DNA matching, FBI scientists used fingerprints, blood types, dental records and forensic anthropology to make identifications.

Two and a half weeks later, after all methods had been exhausted, the remains still unidentified were quietly buried in a Merrillville cemetery without notifying relatives. This was one of several missteps officials made in dealing with the families of the dead.

As for the cause of the crash, it was believed from the start to have been ice buildup on the wings, and this was confirmed by a Federal Aviation Administration investigation. The report blamed the plane's manufacturer, Avions de Transport Regional for not studying the effects of ice on its planes after others had similar problems. It also said the French Directorate General for Civil Aviation exercised inadequate oversight of the plane's performance in icy conditions. And it faulted the FAA for not disseminating timely information about flight hazards during icy conditions.

The FAA ordered new instructions for flying in icy conditions, and American Eagle improved equipment that breaks ice off wings.

Families of the crash victims had been frustrated and angered by the lack of timely information provided to them during the ordeal and their activism led to passage of the Aviation Disaster Family Assistance Act of 1996. That law requires the federal government and airlines to get information to families of crash victims faster and respond more fully and promptly to their questions and requests.

People who lived near the crash site were affected by it also. On the one-year anniversary of the crash members of the Lincoln Township Volunteer Fire Department in Newton County -- they had been among the first on the scene that awful night -- held a memorial service attended by grateful crash families. After the ceremony at the fire station everyone drove to the crash site where area residents had erected 68 white crosses, each bearing the name of a victim.

Friday 14 March 2014

http://www.indystar.com/story/news/history/retroindy/2014/03/13/american-eagle-flight-4184/6370425/

continue reading

New York building collapse death toll rises as search for victims continues


The search was continuing on Thursday for victims of a gas explosion in the East Harlem neighbourhood of New York that killed at least eight people and left more than 70 injured. Minutes before the explosion, utility company Con Edison received a call from a nearby building warning about a gas smell. As Con Edison employees headed to the scene, the explosion caused the collapse of two buildings and resulted in a fierce fire. The explosion has raised questions about the age and condition of infrastructure in New York City and around the United States. A report published this week showed many gas pipes in the city are more than 50 years old. Search and rescue teams combed through the smouldering rubble overnight in search of people who were reported missing. Just after midnight, the body of an adult male was found in the rubble. The bodies of a man and woman were found in the debris on early Thursday morning, and another body was discovered in the afternoon. New York City mayor Bill de Blasio said that search and rescue operations would continue “for an open-ended period of time,” at a press conference on Thursday. He said below-freezing temperatures and heavy winds that whipped up smouldering fires at the site were affecting recovery efforts. “This has been a very painful episode for the people of East Harlem,” de Blasio said. “There are still a lot of unknowns here.” The mayor said officials were not certain how many people were still missing. “There are still questions about the whereabouts of some individuals so I don’t want to put forward a number until we are certain,” de Blasio said. De Blasio said the city’s fire department, police department and the National Transportation Safety Board are conducting a joint investigation to determine the exact cause of the explosion. Officials said that the city’s emergency telephone lines had not received a report of a gas leak in the destroyed buildings or those that surrounded them in the past 30 days. John McAvoy, the CEO of Con Edison, the utility company, said that in addition to the call received just before the explosion, the company had received two calls about gas leaks on the block in the past three years. The city has evacuated 89 residential buildings and three stores in the vicinity of the blast site because of damage and because gas and water have been cut off from the area. De Blasio said these buildings were not vacated because of structural concerns. The accident has raised questions about the city’s infrastructure, buttressed by a report issued a day earlier in the week, highlighting the city’s ageing utilities networks. De Blasio said infrastructure problems are “a fundamental challenge for New York City and any older city”. “Areas with old and vulnerable infrastructure describes a lot of New York City, honestly,” de Blasio said. City officials also emphasised that people affected by the explosion would receive help, regardless of their immigration status. More than 250 firefighters responded to the incident on Wednesday and National Transportation Safety Board representatives arrived later in the day to help investigate the cause of the explosion. The explosion destroyed two five-story apartment buildings, 1644 and 1646 Park Avenue. The two buildings had a total of 15 apartments The street-level floor of one building housed a piano store and the other a Spanish Christian church. The buildings were parallel to train tracks and debris from the accident caused Metro-North commuter railroad service to be suspended on Wednesday. Service was restored late in the afternoon. On Tuesday, a day before the incident, the Center for an Urban Future released a report criticizing New York City’s infrastructure. The report (pdf) said that the city’s gas mains are, on average, 56 years old and “more than half of its gas mains were installed before 1960”. Friday 14 March 2014 http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/mar/13/new-york-building-collapse-death-toll-search-victims

continue reading

Thursday, 13 March 2014

Malaysia jet search: India to deploy ships, aircraft and helicopters


India's defense ministry instructed the joint command on the remote Andaman and Nicobar Islands to deploy ships, aircraft and helicopters to search for a missing Malaysian airliner, a command spokesman Harmeet Singh told Reuters.

The armed forces will hold a meeting to decide how to coordinate their search efforts with other countries, after which they will make deployments, a senior command officer said.

The Wall Street Journal reported that U S investigators probing the disappearance of a Malaysia Airlines passenger jet believe it may have flown for four hours after losing contact with air traffic controllers, .

If confirmed, the report would represent another dramatic twist in what is already one of the most baffling mysteries in modern aviation history — the fate of Flight MH370, which took off from Kuala Lumpur early on Saturday and dropped off civilian radar screens less than an hour into its flight to Beijing.

On the sixth day of the search, planes were sweeping an area of sea where Chinese satellite images had shown what could be debris, but had so far found no sign of the airliner.

The Wall Street Journal said US aviation investigators and national security officials believed the plane flew for a total of five hours, based on data automatically downloaded and sent to the ground from the Boeing 777's engines as part of a standard monitoring program.

It raises the possibility that the plane, and the 239 people on board, could have flown on for an additional distance of about 2,200 miles (3,500 km), potentially reaching Pakistan, destinations in the Indian Ocean or Mongolia, the paper said.

A senior Malaysia Airlines official told Reuters that no such data existed, while a second official said he was unaware of it. A spokeswoman for engine manufacturer Rolls-Royce had no immediate comment.

Malaysia Airlines has said previously that the Rolls-Royce Trent engines stopped transmitting monitoring signals when contact with the plane was lost.

As frustration mounts over the failure to find any trace of the plane, China heaped pressure on Malaysia to improve coordination in the search. Around two-thirds of the people aboard the lost plane were Chinese.

Premier Li Keqiang, speaking at a news conference in Beijing, demanded that the "relevant party" step up coordination while China's civil aviation chief said he wanted a "smoother" flow of information from Malaysia, which has come under heavy criticism for its handling of the disaster.

Vietnamese and Malaysian planes scanned waters where a Chinese government agency website said a satellite had photographed three "suspicious floating objects" on Sunday. The location was close to where the plane lost contact with air traffic control.

Aircraft repeatedly circled the area over the South China Sea but were unable to detect any objects, said a Reuters journalist aboard one of the planes.

Thursday 13 March 2014

http://www.arabnews.com/news/539431

continue reading

How the search for Flight MH370 is run


The longer it takes, the harder it gets to find the lost Malaysia Airlines flight MH370.

Spotting small objects floating on the surface of the water is a tough task after any air crash. But the more any debris has a chance to disperse, the greater the degree of difficulty in spotting it, even with sophisticated airborne search radars.

The search area has already been widened from the initial location south of Vietnam. The aircraft disappeared on Saturday during a routine flight from Kuala Lumpur to Beijing with 239 passengers and crew on board.

Without a large dose of luck or detection of any of the emergency locator beacons from the aircraft, some of which should have automatically activated but seemingly didn’t, it may take months – even years – to locate the wreckage.

The international response

The Malaysian search teams have been joined by others from Australia, China, the US, Singapore, Vietnam, New Zealand, Indonesia and Thailand.

Such a massive international effort is maintained through conventions governed by the International Civil Aviation Organisation (ICAO), part of the United Nations.

All signatory countries maintain maritime search and rescue organisations that are able to swing into action rapidly in response to an emergency.

The conventions also allow countries in whose jurisdiction an incident occurs to call upon help from others. This allowed the Australian government to act quickly and send two Royal Australian Air Force Orion aircraft to the search effort.

Piecing together answers from a crash

When the aircraft is eventually located the recovery phase should begin fairly quickly, depending on its location and degree of difficulty.

If bodies are recovered, there will be the need to conduct post mortem examinations to determine the nature and cause of death. If the bodies of the flight crew are recovered, their examination may also shed valuable light on what may have happened in the cockpit that led to the crash.

In any wreckage recovery phase, an international collaboration may be necessary to make sure the right equipment is available to access the wreckage, and recover the flight recorders.

While many countries have capacity to analyse flight data, many do not. Some agencies, such as the Australian Transport Safety Bureau, have developed specialist expertise in this area and can provide assistance if requested.

Investigators may also attempt to “reconstruct” the aircraft from any wreckage. They will be looking for any signs or symptoms of pre-crash damage or failures not consistent with the overall damage pattern in evidence from the subsequent crash sequence.

This has been done in many past accidents to help establish the cause beyond doubt, including the Boeing 747 Pan Am 103 flight that exploded over Lockerbie in 1988.

That kind of reconstruction is particularly effective in cases of an internal explosion, because the outward bending of the aircraft skin in the area of the blast may be clearly evident – provided, of course, the sections of skin from around the blast area are recovered.

Who is responsible for the investigation?

Even in the investigation phase, international conventions under the ICAO dictate which state is responsible for the investigation and which others have the right to participate.

ICAO Annex 13 to the Convention on International Air Transportation makes the state where the accident occurs responsible for the conduct of an investigation. This will not be known until the aircraft is discovered.

Where the accident occurs in international waters, the responsibility to mount an investigation rests with the State of Registry of the aircraft, which is Malaysia in the case of flight MH370. Other nearby states are required to provide assistance where possible.

Annex 13 also grants rights to others to participate in the investigation of aircraft accidents. They include the state of registry, the state of the operator and the state of design and the state of manufacture.

Each representative will have full access to all the facts and data collected as part of the investigation, including rights to examine the wreckage, obtain witness information, suggest areas of questioning and make submissions about various elements of the investigation.

Other states can ask to have representatives participate, especially where there is a significant interest, such as where a state might have a lot of the same aircraft type on its register. These requests are generally granted.

Making it safer

The aim of these international conventions is to make sure that – where possible – lessons are learnt from the investigation into accidents, regardless of where they occur. They also allow for any changes to be made to prevent similar accidents from happening again.

The conventions are a vital component of aviation safety and without them an already difficult post-accident situation would be rendered completely chaotic.

The secrets to what actually happened to flight MH370 are locked in the plane’s flight recorders, so let’s hope they’re found before too long so their story can be revealed.

Only that will start the closure and healing of those close to this incident, and provide vital lessons for the rest of us to learn.

Thursday 13 March 2014

http://www.livescience.com/44068-air-crash-investigation-how-the-search-for-flight-mh370-is-run.html

continue reading

Searching for Central American migrants who disappeared in Mexico


Guatemalan Arturo Reyes remains forever haunted by what happened on one fateful day in February 2011, when he learned just how dangerous – and deadly – a northern trek across Mexico can be for those searching for a better life.

He was among 75 Central American migrants who were forced at gunpoint to get off a train known as “La Bestia” (The Beast) in Boca de Cerro in the state of Tabasco. Their journey toward the U.S. was over – and it was about to get worse, much, much worse.

“They robbed us, beat us and raped two young women and a boy. Anyone who tried to escape was killed right in front of our eyes,” Reyes, 23, recalled while telling his story to the National Human Rights Commission (NHRC) at an immigration station in Tabasco.

The kidnappers demanded a US$4,500 ransom from the families for each hostage. Four days into the kidnapping, an Army unit forced the abductors to flee the safe house, freeing the hostages.

“I was going to the United States to look for a job and a better life, but now I can’t forget the smell of blood and death,” he said. “We got out, yes, but we were broken.”

But the terror that happened to Reyes, who eventually returned to Guatemala, is commonly experienced by migrants, who often are raped, beaten and killed – generally by cartels and organized crime groups – during their journey.

From 2006 to 2013, 120,000 migrants disappeared while travelling through Mexico. In 2012 alone, 11,000 migrants were kidnapped, according to the NHRC.

According to the National Migration Institute (INM), 171,000 undocumented migrants entered Mexico in 2013, 95% of them from El Salvador, Guatemala, Honduras and Nicaragua.

Faced with this situation, civil society organizations such as Mexico’s Movimiento Migrante Mesoamericano (Mesoamerican Migrant Movement), El Salvador’s Committee of Families of Missing and Dead Migrants and Honduras’ Committee of El Progreso Families of Missing Migrants are searching for their relatives in caravans travelling the length of the migrants’ route from Central America to Mexico.

“We have travelled in caravans from Nicaragua to the northern Mexican border. We visit prisons, morgues, shelters and hospitals,” said Marta Sรกnchez Soler, coordinator of Caravana de Madres de Migrantes Centroamericanos Desaparecidos (Caravan of Mothers of Missing Central American Migrants).

“In 2013, we visited 26 towns in 15 Mexican states,” she added. “We travelled 3,958 kilometers and had some very good results: We located 12 people.”

Honduran Marรญa รngeles de los Santos รvila, 74, joined Caravana de Madres de Migrantes Centroamericanos Desaparecidos in 2013, hoping to finding her son, Josรฉ Armando, who disappeared soon after leaving Honduras in 1994.

The Movimiento Migrante Mesoamericano finally made telephone contact with Josรฉ Armando in mid-2013 and reunited him with Marรญa รngeles on Dec. 5, 2013 in the Mexican state of San Luis Potosรญ. He had been living in Matamoros in the northern state of Tamaulipas for 20 years and had been unable to contact his family despite repeated attempts.

“I couldn’t believe the moment I had longed for so much had arrived, after thinking my son was no longer alive,” Marรญa รngeles said. “Now, I can live in peace again.”

Sรกnchez Soler said Caravana de Madres de Migrantes Centroamericanos has located more than 200 missing persons since the first of nine caravans started searching in 2006.

“These movements are beneficial to the federal government because they help us coordinate efforts and create regional mechanisms for locating missing people,” INM Director of Outreach and Migrant Protection Ana Cecilia Oliva Balcรกrcel said.

At the 2013 Regional Conference on Migration held in Costa Rica and attended by representatives from the United States, Canada, Central American countries and the Dominican Republic, Mexico signed an agreement to create a joint database with information about missing migrants.

“This is a very important step,” Oliva Balcรกrcel said. “It’s the beginning of a coordinated effort by governments and civil organizations to locate the missing.”

Thomas Lothar Weiss, the International Organization for Migration chief of mission in Mexico, said these cooperation agreements are important “because of the joint responsibility among countries in the region to strengthen and improve migrant safety.”

In August 2013, the Mexican Office of the Attorney General created a forensic analysis commission, which includes the Argentine Forensic Anthropology Team and civil society organizations from Mexico, El Salvador, Honduras and Guatemala, to examine human remains found in hidden graves in the states of Tamaulipas and Nuevo Leรณn.

In December, the commission reported on the forensic analysis of 49 bodies found in May 2012 in Cadereyta Jimรฉnez in Nuevo Leรณn. Eight bodies were determined to be those of Honduran migrants.

The other bodies have yet to be identified.

“[The caravans] have forced the Mexican government to recognize that thousands of migrants have disappeared,” Institute for Women in Migration Director Gretchen Kuhner said. “The government has an obligation to assist in the examination and identification of bodies found in hidden graves.”

More protection

At the same time, the Mexican government is increasing the protection of migrants. During the first two months of the year, authorities in the state of Chiapas rescued 1,438 victims of criminal organizations allegedly extorting migrants, according to a joint press release by the INM, the National Defense Secretariat and the Mexican Navy.

The operation also led to the arrests of 74 suspects in connection with being part of a human-trafficking network.

“Mexico offers free repatriation for rescued migrants from Guatemala, El Salvador, Nicaragua and Honduras, with the utmost respect for their human rights, and provides legal, medical and psychological aid when needed,” Oliva Balcรกrcel said.

In 2013, authorities repatriated 69,481 migrants to their respective countries after repatriating 62,839 migrants in 2012, according to INM.

Meanwhile, the mothers of missing migrants’ organizations and civil society continue their efforts.

“Our work will continue as long as the problem remains,” Sรกnchez Soler said. “We follow clues all year from telephone records and migrants’ testimony, trying to locate missing persons and bring back a little joy to the families who have suffered so much.”

Thursday 13 March 2014

http://infosurhoy.com/en_GB/articles/saii/features/main/2014/03/12/feature-01

continue reading

Andalucia to look for missing victims of Franco


Authorities in Andalucia are to step up the search for the remains of people who went missing during the civil war.

The state will be able to temporarily expropriate land in cases where its owner does not allow a search for a mass grave on the property, under a draft law presented by the regional government.

An estimated 60,000 people went missing in Andalucia during the war, between 1936 and 1939.

The draft law of “democratic memory” also stipulates that statues, street names and other public symbols honouring Franco and his dictatorship, which ran until his death in 1975, be removed within 18 months.

The move furthers that of a law passed in 2007, which requires reminents of the regime be destroyed, but set no time table.

Right wing local authorities have resisted attempts by campaigners to force them to comply with the legislation.

Andalucia argues the measures in its draft law have the backing of the United Nations Committee on Enforced Disappearance, which last year recommended Spain uncover the fates of victims of Franco.

Around 114,000 bodies of people killed during the civil war and Franco’s four-decade rule are thought to lie in mass graves around Spain.

Thursday 13 March 2014

http://www.theolivepress.es/spain-news/2014/03/13/andalucia-to-look-for-missing-victims-of-franco/

continue reading

Recovering plane wreckage from water an arduous task


When planes crash into water, it can take days to find the "black boxes" that record information about the flight — even when the plunge is witnessed, according to four plane crash investigations before the latest search for Malaysia Airlines Flight 370.

And once the wreckage is recovered, the investigation following can then take years.

In a more difficult case, it took two years to find the flight recorders after the 2009 crash of Air France Flight 447 in the Atlantic Ocean, and months more to recover parts of the plane. The difficulties came even though the plane went down within a few miles of its last signal.

"You start with the last place you know where the airplane was and widen out from there," said William Waldock, who formerly worked in Coast Guard search and rescue and now teaches safety science at Embry-Riddle Aeronautical University in Arizona. "It should have been right over the Gulf of Thailand where it started."

He was surprised that Vietnam's fairly sophisticated radar wasn't able to track the plane or its debris all the way to the water.

"For them not to be able to be able to track it to the surface, I just find that astounding," Waldock said.

Even when the crash is witnessed, such as the TWA explosion in 1996, the search can be difficult because debris can spread in the air on the way down or in the water's current.

"When it hits water, it's not like a brick wall, not a solid and it starts breaking up more," said Al Yurman, a former investigator with the National Transportation Safety Board. "It rips things apart."

He suggested the Gulf of Thailand, where the search has focused since the Malaysia flight disappeared early Saturday, is a large area to cover.

"It could take them any amount of time more before they find anything," Yurman said.

Following are the results of four plane crashes that illustrate the difficulties of a water recovery:

Trans World Airlines Flight 800, a Boeing 747-131, from New York's JFK airport to Paris broke up over the Atlantic Ocean near East Moriches, Long Island, on July 17, 1996, killing 230 people on board. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board investigated.

The search: The plane broke up and fell into the ocean about 8:30 p.m., with witnesses on shore witnessing the flash. Pieces of wreckage were found along a path 4 miles long and 3.5 miles wide. Remote-operated vehicles and divers were used to recover victims and wreckage. The recovery took 10 months and retrieved more than 95% of the plane.

The black boxes were recovered July 24, 1996. Although the recorders were damaged in the crash, they yielded "data of good quality."

The investigation concluded Aug. 23, 2000. The NTSB ruled that the center fuel tank exploded, likely from a short-circuit in nearby wiring.

SilkAir Flight 185 from Jakarta, Indonesia, to Singapore crashed Dec. 19, 1997, in the Musi River in Indonesia, killing 104 people aboard. Indonesia's National Transportation Safety Committee investigated.

The search: The Boeing 737-300 crashed about 4 p.m. and wreckage penetrated deep into the river bed, although parts of the plane were found nearly 2½ miles away. About 73% of the plane was recovered, most from an area in the river 196 feet by roughly 262 feet. The river was about 26 feet deep at that location. Recovery was difficult for Indonesia and Singapore navy divers because of the river current and because much of the wreckage was buried. Only six human remains were recovered at the site. Recovery of the wreckage was completed Jan. 28, 1998.

The flight-data recorder was recovered by divers on Dec. 24 and the cockpit-voice recorder by river dredging on Jan. 8, 1998. But the black boxes had been turned off before the plane's descent from 35,000 feet.

The investigation was concluded Dec. 14, 2000. The NTSC found no mechanical failure to explain the crash and ruled that the plane was probably steered to the ground from the cockpit. A California jury hearing a case about the crash later ruled that the plane's rudder malfunctioned and forced the plane into the ground.

EgyptAir Flight 990 from New York's JFK airport to Cairo crashed Oct. 31, 1999, about 60 miles south of Nantucket, killing 217 people aboard. The U.S. National Transportation Safety Board investigated, at Egypt's request.

The search: The Boeing 767-366ER crashed about 1:50 a.m. and debris was found in two fields. The initial recovery effort lasted from Oct. 31 to Dec. 22, when about 70% of the plane was recovered. A second recovery to gather more material occurred March 29 to April 1, 2000.

The Navy found the flight-data recorder Nov. 9 and the cockpit-voice recorder Nov. 14. Both recorders were damaged in the crash and their tapes were wet when found, but the tapes were in otherwise good condition and investigators were able to retrieve information from them.

The investigation was concluded March 13, 2002. The NTSB found no problems with the plane and ruled that a relief pilot steered the plane into the ocean for unknown reasons.

Air France Flight 447 from Rio de Janeiro to Paris crashed in the Atlantic Ocean off the coast of Brazil on June 1, 2009, killing 228 people on board. . The Bureau d'Enquetes et d'Analyses investigated.

The search: French and Brazilian navies found floating debris from the Airbus A330-203 between June 6 and 26, but the search for the plane took years longer in four phases. The third unsuccessful phase spanned 2,400 square miles of ocean in April and May 2010. The wreckage was finally located about 12,800 feet deep on April 2, 2011, during the fourth phase from March 23 to April 12, 2011, about 6.5 nautical miles from its last known signal. Ultimately 104 bodies and parts of the plane were recovered by June 16, 2011.

The flight-data recorder was recovered May 1, 2011, and the cockpit-voice recorder the next day. Parts of the memory boards were damaged, which investigators tried to repair, but some data was missing.

The investigation concluded July 27, 2012. The BEA concluded that the plane's airspeed indicators froze during a storm and surprised pilots, who mistakenly pulled the aircraft into an aerodynamic stall and fell into the ocean.

Thursday 13 March 2014

http://www.usatoday.com/story/news/nation/2014/03/12/plane-crash-recovery/6298345/

continue reading

China belatedly reports 31 dead in tunnel blast


The death toll from a little-reported road explosion was disclosed Thursday to be a much higher 31, nearly two weeks after the blast shook a highway tunnel in northwestern China.

The city government of Jincheng in Shaanxi province said a team assembled by the State Council to investigate the blast met Thursday in the city to brief on the latest developments. It said another nine people were missing.

The city statement came minutes after China concluded its annual meeting of its ceremonial congress in Beijing, raising questions if the case had been purposely given little attention to avoid disruption to the convention.

The crash March 1 involved more than 40 vehicles, including those carrying hazardous materials, and a fire burned for three days. But the scant news coverage largely ceased on March 5, the day when China's ceremonial legislative body — the National People's Congress — opened in Beijing for its annual meeting.

There is no official explanation for the lack of attention to the tunnel crash, but it would be consistent with China's heightened efforts to ensure social stability when the congress was in session by playing down what the authorities deem as negative news.

Also, senior government officials were in Beijing for the congress, leaving a temporary leadership vacuum in local governments.

Xinhua News Agency said two tankers loaded with the flammable methanol collided inside the Yanhou Tunnel on a highway in Shaanxi province, causing a blast and setting fire to coal trucks in the traffic.

The March 5 report by Xinhua said 13 people were dead, another 11 injured, and 42 vehicles destroyed in the fire that burned more than 1,500 tons of coal over 73 hours. An update on Tuesday said the death toll had increased from 13 to 16.

Xinhua said it had been extremely challenging to identify victims, because many bodies were carbonized in the blaze.

The official microblog by a local highway battalion made no mention of the deadly crash but on March 5 posted a notice by the provincial government that bans hazardous chemicals from all highways in the province for one year.

Thursday 13 March 2014

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/03/13/3094026/china-belatedly-reports-31-dead.html

continue reading