Thursday, 8 May 2014

South Korean ferry accident: Number of people missing rises


The number of people missing in the South Korean ferry sinking disaster rose after two unregistered Chinese nationals onboard were detected to be missing, authorities said on Thursday.

There was no change in the total number of passengers, but the number of those missing has risen, Xinhua cited from an interim report on rescue operations by Coast Guard chief Kim Seok-kyun.

As of Thursday, 269 people have been confirmed dead, while 35 are still missing. The number of those saved was 172.

The number of those rescued fell by two due to a double report and a mistaken calculation.

The number of missing rose by two as two Chinese nationals unregistered in the passenger list were added, Kim said.

A total of four Chinese nationals were onboard the ferry, which sank off the country's southwestern coast April 16.

On the 23rd day into search, no bodies were retrieved overnight as climatic conditions became worse in the area.

Koh Myung-seok, spokesman of the accident response centre, told a press briefing that divers have stood by overnight as waves were high and strong winds were blowing.

Divers will be able to plunge into waters Thursday afternoon to search passenger cabins on the third, fourth and fifth floors of the five-storey vessel along with communal spaces such as restaurants and toilets, Koh said.

The number of injured divers kept rising as they were exhausted amid the protracted search operations. Six more divers received decompression treatment Wednesday, taking the total number of those injured to 24.

Thursday 08 May 2014

http://news.oneindia.in/international/south-korean-ferry-accident-two-more-missing-1443695.html

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Memories on 50th anniversary of airplane disaster in the East Bay still run strong


The story of Pacific Airlines Flight 773 is a nearly forgotten chapter in the annals of senseless airplane tragedies.

But 50 years ago, the serene sloping hills of the Tassajara Valley were the scene of the first commercial airliner crash of its kind -- one that forced aviation safety reforms.

On May 7, 1964, Flight 773, a "gambler's special" flight from Reno to San Francisco via Stockton, took a nose-dive into the hills from 5,000 feet. The Fairchild F27A turboprop airliner hit with a thunderous crash some described as "a sonic boom," erupting into a ball of fire and an enormous plume of smoke that could be seen for miles. It left 44 people dead.

Investigators, FBI agents, police and press all descended upon the grassy dunes, combing through the shredded metal and human remains for clues to what caused the crash. The sleepy hamlet of Danville became the center of operations for the flight recovery and investigation efforts -- a place where loved ones came to claim the bodies that filled a makeshift morgue at the Village Theater.

"It was just a big boom ... and we'd never seen anything like that ever, in our nice, little, quiet community," said Gordon Rasmussen, a rancher who heard the crash that day. "It was horrific."

The handgun changed everything

It would take three days for an essential key to the mystery to be found -- a .357 magnum revolver, twisted and blackened from the fire, with six bullets still inside.

Francisco Paula Gonzales, 27, a member of the Philippines 1960 Olympics yachting team, reportedly had been depressed over marital and debt-related financial problems. He showed the revolver to numerous friends and told them he planned to shoot himself. He even told people they'd read about him in the papers around May 6 or 7. And on his final night in the casinos in Reno, he told a casino worker he didn't care how much money he lost because "it won't make any difference after tomorrow."

As the May 7 sun was rising, Gonzales shot both the pilot and co-pilot before turning the gun on himself. The plane plummeted to the ground, killing all on aboard.

Days later, the long and hard-to-understand message on the air traffic control tower's voice recording with the pilots was finally deciphered. Co-pilot First Officer Ray Andress, of Santa Clara, was heard saying, "Skipper's shot. We've been shot! Trying to help." And then more shots could be heard -- and then just static.

Legacy of a tragedy

Flight 773 made a lasting mark in aviation history as the first commercial flight during which the pilot was killed by a gunman, causing passengers to die in a crash, said Jerry Warren, board vice president of the Museum of the San Ramon Valley in Danville, who spent months researching the crash.

Back then, it seemed like an isolated incident, said Julie Clark, the daughter of pilot Ernie Clark and now an El Dorado County resident: "People just didn't kill people, go through cockpit doors and shoot people."

Flight 773 "did change a lot of things in the airline industry," said Judy Clark Grilli, Julie Clark's twin sister. In addition to Clark's Law (named after Ernie Clark), requiring cockpit doors on commercial flights be locked, Flight 773 prompted federal rules and legislation requiring that voice recorders be installed in the cockpit of all passenger aircraft, Warren said.

Grilli was 15 when her father's plane went down. She recalls being called out of her high school class before lunchtime; when she saw her sister Julie walking ahead of her in the hallway, they both knew something horrible had happened, she said. Their mother had died in an accident almost a year earlier, and they'd been called out of school in exactly the same way.

Exacerbating their pain was the rampant speculation, before the gun was recovered, that her father may have been at fault, said Julie Clark, who later became one of the first female pilots in the commercial aviation industry.

When she -- and the rest of the world -- found out that a lone gunman, a passenger, was responsible, "I thought 'hallelujah.' I was just happy, because I knew it wasn't (my dad's) fault," she recalled.

National focus on Danville

For days, the hills of the Tassajara Valley were marred by "the chaos" of the wreckage, recalled Gayle Montgomery, a former Oakland Tribune reporter and editor who covered the crash for three days.

"You'd find pieces of body ... and it wasn't pretty," he said. "And this was a gamblers' plane, so apparently everyone had brought back a deck of playing cards, which were scattered everywhere."

Nearby Danville -- then a town of some 13,000 people -- bustled during the recovery efforts.

Chuck Fereira was 17 and a senior at San Ramon Valley High School at the time. His mother was a beautician who also worked for the town mortician, Mel Whalin, helping prepare bodies for viewing. The enormity of the crash hit home three days later, when he and his father were anxiously waiting for his mother to come home and cook dinner. She arrived uncharacteristically late -- and uncharacteristically emotional, he said.

"Finally I remember my dad coming in and telling me then that the crash was caused by someone who had shot the pilots," he said. "And by that time, the town had really begun to comprehend the magnitude of what happened."

Fifty years later, Fereira calls the crash a defining local moment that ranked almost with President Kennedy's assassination.

"But even that, you watched on TV or talked about in church -- it wasn't in your backyard."

Thursday 08 May 2014

http://www.mercurynews.com/bay-area-news/ci_25709314/memories-50th-anniversary-airplane-disaster-tassajara-hills-still

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Wednesday, 7 May 2014

Unidentified 9/11 remains to be moved to Ground Zero memorial

Thousands of unidentified remains from victims of the Sept. 11, 2001 attacks in New York will be taken Saturday to Ground Zero, where a memorial of the attacks has been erected.

The attacks — in which hijacked jetliners smashed into the Twin Towers, the Pentagon in Washington, and a field in Pennsylvania — killed some 2,753 at the World Trade Center, alone.

But only 1,115 of the bodies were ever identified, according to figures from the New York medical examiners office.

The unidentified remains will be moved to a specially-built repository under the National September 11 Memorial Museum “on Saturday morning,” said Susan Dahill, communication director for the “Voices of September 11th,” a group that works with some 800 families of victims of the attacks.

The mayor’s office sent a letter to victims’ families to announce the transfer, local media reported. An assistant press secretary told AFP further details would be provided later in the week.

Nearly 8,000 pieces of human remains — which authorities have been unable to match with the DNA of victims provided by families — will be moved in a “solemn, somber, respectful procession” of vehicles from the police, fire department, and the Port Authority of New York and New Jersey, the New York Times reported.

There will be no religions ceremony or service, nor will the event be attended by city officials, the newspaper added.

Dahill explained the event will only be open to family members of the victims, “because of the space limitation.”

The museum opens to the public on May 21, though authorities have established a five-day tribute period starting May 15 specifically for family members, workers at the former World Trade Center, rescue workers from the attack, and survivors.

The re-built World Trade Center includes five new skyscrapers, the memorial, the museum, a metro stop, some 550,000 square feet (51,000 square meters) of retail space, and a performing arts center.

Wednesday 07 May 2014

http://www.rawstory.com/rs/2014/05/06/unidentified-911-remains-to-be-moved-to-ground-zero-memorial/

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Argentine team IDs victims in Mexico kidnapping case


Experts from the Argentine Team of Forensic Anthropology (EAAF) concluded that 12 bodies found in a mass grave in Mexico last August correspond to a group of young people who were kidnapped from a bar in the capital’s upscale Zona Rosa district, Mexican prosecutors said.

“The results of the external investigation conducted by Argentine specialists confirm the findings released by this institution and by the Attorney General of the Republic’s Office on the full identification of the Heaven bar victims,” the Federal District Attorney’s Office said in a statement.

The remains of 13 people were found in a clandestine grave in Tlalmanalco, in Mexico state, in August last year. Local investigators said 12 of them had been abducted from the Heaven bar three months earlier but failed to identify the thirteenth body.

The Argentine team was called to aid Mexican experts after some of the victims’ relatives expressed doubts about local investigators’ conclusions and demanded that foreign experts examine the remains.

On Sunday, after the Argentine experts concluded that the remains belonged to the victims of the Heaven bar kidnapping, members of the team met with relatives to explain the methodology they used to identify the bodies.

The relatives said they trusted the team’s conclusions but criticized the work of Mexican investigators.

They claimed that they had initially been shown photos of remains that didn’t belong to their children.

Four of the bodies were released to relatives and nine others were kept at the coroner’s office at the request of family members until the final identification could be completed.

Police believe that the mass kidnapping was in reprisal for the murder of Horacio Vite Angel, a reputed member of the La Unión de Insurgentes drug gang, by the rival La Unión de Tepito gang.

Tepito is the crime-ridden downtown Mexico City neighbourhood where most of the victims lived.

The case

The Heaven bar kidnapping occurred in May last year, at midday, on a sunny Sunday in an upscale district in the heart of Mexico City. Five cars pulled up outside the after-hours club known as Heaven — located just a block from the federal police administrative offices and the US Embassy — and eight men and four women who had been partying all night left and climbed inside, grainy surveillance video shows.

Then they vanished.

After more than two months during which the Mexico City police achieved little progress, federal investigators were brought in. Just a few weeks after they had started working on the case, they discovered 13 bodies — the 12 young victims and an unidentified person — on a ranch 50 kilometres away from where they disappeared.

Tattoos and dental work allowed investigators to identify many of the victims of the Heaven club almost immediately but relatives of the 12 received the news with mistrust. They accused Mexico City’s law-enforcement authorities of moving slowly on the sensitive investigation, perhaps because they were afraid of what it might reveal.

Police involvement

With some 100,000 police officers in the capital, Mexico’s largest cartels have little public presence in the country’s capital. The retail drug business is booming, however, and local drug gangs collectively make US$100-200 million a day selling marijuana, cocaine and hallucinogens.

Investigators believe dealers from the poor eastern neighbourhood of Tepito had been trying to move in on the Unión de Insurgentes, a gang that’s named after the city’s prosperous main north-south thoroughfare and controls sales in virtually all of the nightspots in the wealthiest parts of the city.

The gang in control hires women as spies to flirt with potential rivals looking to sell drugs on their territory, and valets are used as lookouts, investigators said. Corrupt police with annual salaries of less than US$10,000 are paid to turn a blind eye.

Around 20 people have been arrested in connection to the case, with four police officers among them, the prosecutor’s office said.

Family ties

Of the 12 victims, at least some had family ties to a Tepito gang.

One, Jerzy Ortíz, has a father, Jorge, who is currently imprisoned for extortion, organized crime, homicide and robbery.

Another victim was Said Sánchez, whose father is serving a 23-year prison sentence for similar crimes.

Surveillance camera footage that could have helped solve the mystery disappeared eight days after the kidnapping. And even when families started to report the missing day after the kidnapping, nothing happened until four days later when the relatives blocked streets in a public protest.

Even then the case seemed to be going slowly, with leads turning up and immediately going cold, and Mexico City officials repeatedly emphasizing that the case was no sign of a broader problem of insecurity in the capital.

“They have many elements, many people, but where are the victims?” Leticia Ponce, mother of 16-year-old Jerzy Ortíz, one of the missing, asked in July. “Are they really trying to find them?”

Wednesday 07 May 2014

http://www.buenosairesherald.com/article/158729/argentine-team-ids-victims-in-mexico-kidnapping-case-

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Tuesday, 6 May 2014

Search resumes for landslide victims after public pressure


The search operation to find the bodies of villagers buried under a mudslide in north-eastern Afghanistan resumed after relatives rejected the government’s decision to halt the operation. The disaster buried the Ab-e-Barik village in Argu district after heavy rains on Friday, leaving about one-third of the 1,000 families missing and feared dead. “We had to start the operation again as the villagers insisted on finding the bodies of their loved ones, see them one last time and bury them,” Gul Ahmad Bedar, deputy governor for Badakhshan province said yesterday. Vice-President Karim Khalili on Saturday said the search operation was halted, arguing that all the missing people had been buried by the mud. He announced the village to be a mass grave.

“But the villagers did not accept the suggestion, saying they want to bury their dear ones,” Bedar said. “Therefore, we hired some 400 workers to pull the bodies out from about 50 metres of mud,” he said, adding that the operation may take at least a week. The number of the missing is estimated at 2,000 to 2,100. More than 300 bodies have been so far recovered and identified, according to officials. About 700 families have been displaced and are living in the open around the ruined village. The government, international aid organisations, businessmen and politicians have provided donations. Some foreign countries promised to send aid. “We received the daily essentials from Tajikistan and the United Arab Emirates yesterday,” said Naveed Ferotan, spokesman for the provincial governor spokesman. “Also, Pakistan and Turkey have said they would help the victims.

He said presidential candidate Ashraf Ghani donated 600,000 Afghanis ($10,500) during his visit to the village on Monday. Before that, Khalili and fellow Vice President Younus Qanooni brought 40 million Afghanis (about $700,000) of government support, he said. An official for the Afghan National Disaster Management Authority in Badakhshan province rejected reports of shortages, saying there were “enough materials.” “We have received more than we expected. There are breads, cooked meals, potable water, milk, medicines, warm clothes, tents and temporary shelters. We transfer them every day to the victims,” Mohammad Asef said. He said people from neighbouring, unaffected villages had also come to the area to try to claim some of the materials.

Tuesday 06 May 2014

http://main.omanobserver.om/?p=78934

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Dozens of Niger migrants missing after being abandoned in Sahara


About 30 migrants from Niger are missing in the Sahara desert without food or water after their driver abandoned them once they crossed into neighbouring Algeria, military sources in Niger said on Monday.

Niger, for decades a transit country for migrants trying to reach North Africa or Europe, has pledged to halt the flow of people through its section of the Sahara after 92 migrants died trying to get to Algeria late last year.

"As I speak, Algerian and Nigerien patrols have been launched on both sides of the border to try and find these 30 migrants who, according to those that were found, don't have anything to eat or drink," a military officer in Niger said, asking not to be named.

The alarm was raised after 14 women and children who split off from the rest of the group were discovered by Algerian soldiers on their side of the border, the officers said.

A second military officer in Niger, who also asked not to be named because they were not authorised to speak to the press, said the migrants had left the northern Niger town of Arlit on May 1 to try to illegally get into Algeria.

"They were abandoned by the driver about 3 km (2 miles) after they crossed into Algeria. Fourteen migrants were saved but the rest of the group has disappeared," the second officer said.

Algerian authorities were not immediately available for comment.

Migrants trying to get to Algeria are often women and children from Niger who are sent to beg outside mosques. Another migrant route to Libya mostly attracts young West African men looking for jobs in North Africa or trying to get into Europe.

Tuesday 06 May 2014

http://uk.reuters.com/article/2014/05/05/uk-niger-algeria-migrants-idUKKBN0DL12U20140505

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South Korean ferry disaster: Diver dies while searching for bodies


A civilian diver searching for bodies in the doomed South Korean ferry that sank last month has died, authorities have said.

Officials said the 53-year-old, known only by his surname Lee, became unconscious and later died in hospital.

He is the first fatality among divers searching the Sewol ferry, which sank on 16 April with 476 people on board.

Only 174 people survived, with many trapped inside the vessel. So far the disaster has claimed 262 lives, with 40 others missing.

Divers have described having to swim though dark, cold waters into the sunken ferry, feeling for children's bodies with their hands in a maze of cabins, corridors and upturned decks.

"We have to touch everything with our hands,” said diver Hwang Dae-sik, whose team had retrieved 14 bodies so far.

“This is the most gruelling and heartbreaking job of my career," he told Reuters news agency.

State news agency Yonhap reported that Lee was a veteran crew member of Undine Marine Industries, which specialises in maritime engineering and rescue work.

He had lost consciousness shortly after diving into waters 25m deep in the early hours of Tuesday.

Fellow divers lost communication with him five minutes into his dive and later pulled him to the surface. It was his first search attempt in the Sewol, according to the authorities.

Prime Minister Chung Hong-won has since ordered government officials overseeing the rescue operation to thoroughly check divers' health conditions.

Despite Lee's death, divers are continuing their searches Tuesday with the authorities believing most of the remaining missing people are in 64 of the ship's 111 areas.

Tuesday 06 May 2014

http://www.huffingtonpost.co.uk/2014/05/06/south-korean-ferry-disaster-diver-dies_n_5271281.html?utm_hp_ref=uk

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22 migrants die, others believed missing after smuggling boats capsize in Greece's Aegean Sea (Update)


A yacht and a dinghy crammed with immigrants trying to sneak into Greece capsized Monday in the eastern Aegean Sea, leaving at least 22 dead and several more missing in one of the deadliest such accidents in Greek waters in recent years.

The vessels had been trying to enter Greece illegally when they overturned before dawn off the island of Samos near the Turkish coast. The boats were overloaded but it was not immediately clear what caused them to capsize. It was Greece's third fatal migrant boat disaster this year.

The Greek coast guard said 36 people — 32 men, three women and a child — were rescued, and two of them — a man and a child — were airlifted to a hospital on the mainland. It identified the survivors as 23 Somalis, nine Syrians and three Eritreans, the coast guard said. The child's nationality and the nationalities of those who died weren't immediately known.

Coast guard officials recovered the bodies of two women, a man and a boy from the sea, and later found a further 18 bodies — including three children — inside the yacht after it was towed to Samos.

Survivors told the coast guard that between 60 and 65 people had been on the 10-meter (30-foot) yacht and the two-meter (six-foot) dinghy that had set off from Turkey.

"We can't give a precise number of missing people," Coast guard spokesman Nikos Lagadianos told The Associated Press before the overturned yacht was searched.

Coast guard vessels, fishing boats and two search and rescue helicopters combed the area for survivors or bodies. A nearby cruise ship helped for several hours being cleared to continue its journey.

Despite the deep financial crisis that brought Greece to the brink of bankruptcy four years ago, the country remains a major entry point for people from poor or war-ravaged parts of Asia and Africa seeking a better life in the 28-nation European Union.

Fatal accidents are frequent as migrants risk the dangerous sea crossing from Turkey. Before Monday's incident, 21 people had drowned in similar incidents since the beginning of the year. At least 21 people died and six are still missing after a similar accident in December 2012.

Over the weekend, the Greek coast guard rescued about 250 immigrants from the sea.

Tuesday 06 May 2014

http://www.usnews.com/news/world/articles/2014/05/05/greece-2-dead-30-missing-as-migrant-boats-sink

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Monday, 5 May 2014

ZSwaziland: At least 13 people die in collision


At least 13 people died in a head-on collision yesterday involving an Iveco midibus and an Opel Corsa Utility van.

About 19 people were rushed to Good Shepherd Hospital. The gruesome accident happened near Mbadlane and Malindza when an Iveco midibus trading under the name Thulas Transport collided with a white Opel Corsa van. Thulas Transport is said to have been travelling from the Manzini direction towards Siteki while the Corsa was driving towards Manzini.

The van had six people on board; two were at the back of the bakkie while the four were in the front. “There was a man and a woman with two minors in the front. There were also two people sitting at the back. They all died on the spot,” a witness said.

The witness further said the people who had been sitting in front in the Corsa van were trapped for over an hour before they could be retrieved.

It is said that when the collision happened, some people tried to get out through the windows of the midibus. “When the midibus and the Corsa collided, some people tried to escape through the windows. It was in that moment that some were injured and others lost their lives,” the witness said.

Lucky Mngometulu, the driver of the midibus said he was driving from Manzini while the Corsa was driving towards the opposite direction. He said the accident was caused by the Corsa which suddenly switched lanes towards the oncoming Iveco.

“I was driving towards Siteki when the Corsa utility van came speeding on my lane. It was overtaking. The next sound I heard was a loud bang when the two vehicles collided,” he said.

The road was closed for over two hours as the vehicles had blocked it. Police had to control the traffic on the side to ease the congestion. Debris of shattered glass were scattered all over the tarmac while bodies were also sprawled all over the place. Police Deputy Public Relations Officer Assistant Superintendent Khulani Mamba confirmed the accident. He said 13 people were confirmed dead while 19 were rushed to hospital. “There were 13 people who died in an accident around Mbadlane. The accident involved an Iveco and an Opel Corsa Utility van. What we gathered is that all the passengers in the Utility van died. Police are investigating the cause of the accident,” he said.

Mamba pleaded with the public to drive within the speed limit as in most instances, speed contributes. This accident happened just five days after another horrific accident along Malagwane where, according to the police, two people died while 35 were injured and five were reported to be in a critical condition. Government has initiated an inquiry to establish what could have caused the accident.

Monday 05 May 2014

http://www.times.co.sz/news/96814-13-die-in-iveco-corsa-collision.html

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Crew missing after cargo ships collide near Hong Kong


Eleven crew members of a Chinese cargo ship were missing following a collision with a container ship in waters off Hong Kong.

The cargo ship Zhong Xing 2 sank after the collision with the 300-metre long Marshall Islands-registered MOL Motivator about two nautical miles south-west of Po Toi Island, a spokeswoman of the Hong Kong maritime department said.

"Zhong Xing 2 is suspected to have sunk after the collision, and it is reported there are 12 crew on board," said the spokeswoman. "One of them was picked up by a fishing vessel navigating close by." The remaining 11 crew were reported missing.

Hong Kong's marine rescue co-ordination centre has deployed one helicopter, five marine police launches and three fire service department launches to assist in the search.

The 79,400-tonne MOL Motivator was travelling from Hong Kong to Yantian port in southern China. Hong Kong is the world's fourth-largest container port, after neighbouring Shenzhen. Vessels navigating near the collision site have been warned there may be a sunken ship nearby and have been asked to stay away.

The Hong Kong Observatory issued an amber rain warning, signalling expectations of heavy rain in parts of the territory overnight.

Thirty-nine people died in the city's worst maritime disaster in more than 40 years in October 2012 when a high-speed ferry collided with a pleasure boat.

Sunday 05 May 2014

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/05/cargo-ships-collide-hong-kong-hong

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Death toll climbs to 12 in Colombia mine accident


More bodies have been pulled from a collapsed gold mine in southwestern Colombia, bringing the number of confirmed fatalities to 12. Four miners are still unaccounted for but presumed dead.

Rescue workers on Sunday had to dig through 20 meters (more than 65 feet) of heavy debris to reach victims of the rock fall that happened Wednesday night in the rural town of Santander de Quilichao.

Mining accidents are common in Colombia, especially at illegal mines like this one in areas dominated by criminal gangs.

Mayor Eduardo Grijalba has asked Colombian President Juan Manuel Santos to help end illegal mining after failed efforts by local authorities to shut down the mine that collapsed.

Sunday 05 May 2014

http://www.boston.com/news/world/latin-america/2014/05/04/death-toll-climbs-colombia-mine-accident/FLvPhAaGd3WCQA4cZbUXVK/story.html

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Maharashtra train derailment: Death toll goes up to 21, traffic resumes


The death toll in the train derailment in Maharashtra's Raigad district has gone up to 21 even as the traffic on the affected stretch was restored on Monday morning.

A Central Railway official put the number of those injured in the mishap to 123.

Nineteen people were killed on Sunday when the engine and four bogies of the Diwa-Sawantwadi passenger train derailed between Nagothane and Roha stations of Raigad.

The official said the death toll has gone up to 21, but did not give details of whether more bodies were recovered or those killed were from the injured who succumbed.

The traffic was restored completely at 4.30am on the Konkan Railway Corporation Limited (KRCL) route.

"The traffic has resumed and all the trains are running on time except for those which were diverted after the accident," KRCL's Public Relation Manager Baban Ghatge said.

Five trains had to be cancelled after the accident on Sunday, he said.

"The traffic is normal now. The trains will be on time," he added.

The KRCL route terminates at Roha.

Following the mishap, services on Konkan Railway route were suspended. Some trains were diverted via Panvel-Lonavala-Pune-Miraj-Londa-Madgaon and a few cancelled.

A goods train had derailed last month on the route, affecting services.

The Railways ordered an inquiry and railway minister Mallikarjun Kharge had announced an ex-gratia of Rs two lakh for the next of the kin those killed in the accident, Rs 50,000 for the grievously hurt and Rs 10,000 for passengers who suffered minor injuries.

Railway Board chairman Arunendra Kumar had said that commissioner (safety) Chetan Bakshi was conducting an inquiry into one of the worst train mishaps in the state in recent times.

Monday 05 May 2014

http://timesofindia.indiatimes.com/india/Maharashtra-train-derailment-Death-toll-goes-up-to-21-traffic-resumes/articleshow/34677051.cms?imageid=34636666#slide3

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Afghanistan declares site of horrific landslide a mass grave as threat of flooding forces villagers to evacuate


As Afghans observed a day of mourning Sunday for the hundreds of people killed in a horrific landslide, authorities tried to help the 700 families displaced by the torrent of mud that swept through their village.

President Hamid Karzai ordered all flags to be flown at half-staff as he called for aid and financial assistance. Local officials and residents in Badakhshan province had lost hope of finding survivors after recovering only 15 bodies, according to Naweed Frotan, a spokesman for the province bordering China and Tajikistan. Authorities have declared the site a mass grave.

As many as 2,000 people are believed dead after the side of a mountain gave way, burying the village of Ab-e-Barak under 40 metres of mud and rocks. An additional 4,000 people have been displaced, according to Ari Gaitanis, a spokesman for the United Nations Assistance Mission in Afghanistan, who provided the death toll.

The missing people “are all dead by now,” said Frotan. “We’re unable to bring the bodies out. There’s no way except to abandon them there.” As many as 2,700 people may be buried, Badakhshan Governor Shah Waliullah Adeeb said yesterday.

The families left their homes due to the threat of more landslides in the village of Abi Barik in Badakhshan province, Minister for Rural Rehabilitation Wais Ahmad Barmak said.

Another reason for the evacuation was the threat of flooding caused in part by the landslide itself, said Mohammad Daim Kakar, from the Afghanistan Natural Disaster Management Authority. He said the shifting earth had made it difficult for water to drain through the valley – a serious concern as rain continued to fall Sunday.



Engineers are working on a plan to divert the water, he said. Aid groups and the government have rushed to the remote area in northeastern Afghanistan bordering Tajikistan and China with food, shelter and water. But for those affected, help was slow to arrive.

“My family, my wife and eight children are alive, but have nothing to use as shelter. We have nothing to eat,” said Barat Bay, a 50-year-old farmer and father of eight. “We have passed the last two nights with our children at the top of this hill with no tent, no blanket.”

Kakar, who visited the area Sunday, acknowledged that aid had yet to reach some people but said their efforts were complicated by villagers from areas unaffected by the landslide also coming to claim the aid.

A spokesman for the International Organization of Migration, Matt Graydon, said the group is bringing solar-powered lanterns, blankets and shelter kits. He said after a visit to the area Sunday that some residents have gone to nearby villages to stay with family or friends while others have slept out in the open.

“Some people left with almost nothing,” Graydon said.



Authorities visiting from Kabul gave $800,000 to the provincial governor during visits on Saturday and Sunday to use in the aid effort, said Kakar and Barmak, who promised that the government would pay more if needed.

Karzai designated Sunday as a day of mourning for the hundreds of people who died. Authorities still don’t have an exact figure on how many people died in the landslide, Barmak said, and estimates have ranged from 250 to 2,700.

The government has identified 250 people who died and estimated that 300 houses were buried under tons of mud, Barmak said.

It will be impossible to dig up all the bodies, but many people continue to look on their own, said Abdullah Homayun Dehqan, the head of Badakhshan province’s National Disaster Department. He said officials met with community elders Sunday in Faizabad, the provincial capital, to see whether they wanted the government to continue digging, but said no final decision has been made.

U.S. President Barack Obama called Karzai on Sunday to offer his condolences and additional assistance for the relief efforts. A White House statement about the call did not elaborate.

Afghanistan has suffered through some three decades of war since the Soviet invasion in 1979. But natural disasters such as landslides, floods and avalanches have taken a toll on a country with little infrastructure or development outside of its major cities.

Already this year, 159 people have died in April and May from flooding, the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs said Sunday in a statement. New waves of flooding are expected in two northern provinces, the agency said.

Sunday 05 May 2014

http://news.nationalpost.com/2014/05/05/afghanistan-declares-site-of-horrific-landslide-a-mass-grave-as-threat-of-flooding-forces-villagers-to-evacuate/

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Death toll in South Korea ferry disaster rises to 260


The death toll in the South Korean ferry disaster has jumped to 260, with 42 people still missing, the government reported Monday.

The higher death toll comes after 11 more bodies were retrieved from the fourth deck of the Sewol ferry, according to South Korea's Government Rescue Headquarters.

On Sunday, South Korean President Park Geun-hye visited the port where the rescue operation is based, to console families and encourage divers.

More than 100 divers are combing the ship room by room, looking for the remaining missing bodies.

The search and rescue operation has turned into a grueling recovery of corpses. No one has been found alive since the ferry sank April 16, with a passenger load largely made up of high school students on a field trip.

The work has become even more difficult because divers have faced closed cabin doors blocked by debris.

Corralling the debris has been difficult for search teams.

Mattresses and clothing from the ship have been found up to 9 miles (15 km) away from the accident site, said Park Seung-ki, a spokesman for the rescue operation.

Large stow and trawler nets will be set up around the sunken ship to catch items that may float away, he said.

The ferry sank en route from Incheon to the resort island of Jeju, off the nation's southwestern coast.

Monday 05 May 2014

http://www.local10.com/news/death-toll-in-south-korea-ferry-disaster-rises/25809936

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18 migrants dead and 30 missing after boats capsize off Greece


Two migrants have drowned and 30 more are missing after their boats capsized in the Aegean sea, Greece's coastguard said on Monday.

More than 60 migrants of unknown nationality had attempted to cross the sea from neighbouring Turkey when their two dinghies capsized near the Greek island of Samos, the coastguard said.

It has so far picked up 36 survivors and two dead, and the operation is ongoing.

"Two drowned bodies were found and 36 migrants have been rescued ... About 30 are missing," an official told Reuters.

Authorities said they did not yet know the nationality of the migrants. Two air force helicopters, assisted by two coastguard vessels, one navy warship and a cruise liner were searching for the missing, the coast guard official said.

Greece, Italy and Malta have repeatedly pressed European Union partners to do more to help them handle the large numbers of migrants.

Greece is one of the main ports of entry into the European Union for people fleeing war-torn and impoverished countries in Africa, the Middle East and the Indian subcontinent.

People traffickers are using Greece's Aegean islands as a preferred route into Europe following a tightening of migration controls along its land border with Turkey.

Sunday 04 May 2014

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/may/05/migrants-dead-dozens-missing-off-greece

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Sunday, 4 May 2014

India: Chronology of major train accidents in recent years


Railways witnessed another train mishap on Sunday after a passenger train derailed on Konkan Railway route in Raigad district, killing 15 people and injuring 50 others.

The incident took place just outside a tunnel near Nidi village, when the engine of Diwa-Sawantwadi passenger train and four bogies derailed at around 10 AM between Nagothane and Roha railway stations.

Sunday’s train accident is the latest in a line of tragedies to have hit the Indian railways. Following is the chronology of major train mishaps in recent years:

February 17, 2014: Three passengers were killed and 37 others injured when ten coaches of a train derailed at Ghoti near Igatpuri in Nashik district. The mishap took place at around 6.20 am when 12618 Nizamuddin-Ernakulam Lakshadweep Mangala Express train was passing through the Ghoti-Igatpuri section, about 35 kms from Nashik.

January 08, 2014: Four persons were charred and five died due to suffocation after three sleeper coaches S2, S3 and S4 of the Bandra Dehradun Express were gutted in fire. The incident occurred between Dahanu Road and Gholvad station near Surat. While the cause of the fire was yet to ascertained, senior railway officers ruled out short circuit.

December 28, 2013: Twenty six people, including two children, were killed and 12 others injured when a fire broke out in the AC 3-tier B-1 coach of the Bangalore-Nanded Express train at Kothacheruvu near Puttaparthi in Anantpur district of Andhra Pradesh. According to Railway officials who inspected the gutted coach, the area near berth 64, where the coach’s power panel was located, did not seem to have been burnt. According to reports, the fire broke out at 3:10 am, when most of the 65 passengers were sleeping. Some managed to escape by breaking the window panes or running to the next coach. The train was stopped and the B-1 coach detached to stop the fire from spreading.

November 02, 2012: The Raigarh-Vijaywada train ran over 8 people at Gotlam railway station in Vizianagaram district in Andhra Pradesh. August 19: At least 37 pilgrims including women and children standing on rail tracks were killed when a speeding express train ploughed into them in Bihar’s Khagaria district. The ‘kanwarias’ (devotees of Lord Shiva) were on the tracks after alighting from the Samastipur-Saharsa passenger train when they were run over by the Saharsa-Patna Rajyarani Express travelling at 80 kmph.

June 30, 2012: Thirty-five passengers were charred to death and 25 others injured when a fire broke out due to a short circuit in a coach of the New Delhi-Chennai Tamil Nadu Express near Nellore in Andhra Pradesh. Thirty-two bodies were recovered from the charred S-11 bogie of the train. According to Nellore district officials, the fire was noticed by a gateman at around 4.15 A.M who alerted officials.

May 31, 2012: Howrah-Dehradun Doon Express derailed near Jaunpur killing seven people.

May 22, 2012: Twenty-five people were killed when the Banglore-bound Hampi Express collided with a stationary goods train in Andhra Pradesh’s Anantapur district.

March 20, 2012: Mathura-Kasganj passenger rammed a min bus at an unmanned level crossing near Hathras station killing 15.

January 11, 2012: Five persons were killed and nine others, including a child, injured in a collision between the Delhi-bound Brahmaputra Mail and a stationary goods train.

Nov 22, 2011: Seven people were burnt to death when the Howrah-Dehradun express caught fire in Giridih in Jharkhand.

July 10, 2011: Kalka mail derailed at Malwa station killing 71.

July 7, 2011: Mathura-Chapra Express rammed a bus at an unmanned crossing near Patiayali station killing 39.

May 22, 2011: Garibrath Express rammed a Bolero at an unmanned level crossing near Madhubani station killing 20.

Oct 20, 2010: Indore-Gwalior Intercity express collided with a goods train at Badarbas station killing 24.

July 19, 2010: Speeding Sealdah-bound Uttarbanga Express rammed into the Vanachal Express at Sainthia station in Bhirbhum district killing 66 people.

May 28, 2010: At least 150 people were killed after Gyaneshwari Express was derailed by Naxals in West Midnapore district of West Bengal.

January 2, 2010: Prayagraj Express collided with Gorakhdham Express from its rear portion near Panki station killing 12.

November 1, 2009: Gorakhpur-Ayodhya passenger train hit a truck at unmanned level crossing near Tikri station, killing 18 people.

October 21, 2009: 23 persons were killed when Goa Express hit Mewad Express from behind near Mathura station killing 23.

April 28, 2009: Tanakpur-Kasganj passenger train hit a bus at an unmanned level crossing near Ghatpuri station killing 11 people.

February 22, 2009: A local passenger-train hit a Bolero in an unmanned level crossing near Barapalli station killing 15 people.

January 25, 2009: Kanpur-Allahabad train rammed a truck near Unchahar station killing 12 people.

Sunday 04 May 2014

http://indianexpress.com/article/india/india-others/chronology-of-major-train-accidents-in-recent-years/

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Mumbai train mishap: 12 killed, 30 injured as Diva-Sawantwadi passenger train derails near Mumbai


At least 12 people were killed and 30 injured when a passenger train derailed on Konkan Railway route in Maharashtra's Raigad district on Sunday.

The accident occurred just outside a tunnel near Nidi village, when the engine and four out of 20 bogies of Diwa-Sawantwadi passenger train derailed at around 10 am between Nagothane and Roha railway stations, about 120 kms from Mumbai.

Rescue operations were going on, police said, adding that workers were trying to extricate people trapped under bogies that overturned after derailment.

According to Raigad police control room, 12 passengers were killed and 30 injured in the mishap which occurred in a remote area. However, a Railway spokesperson put the death toll at nine.

Ten bodies have been sent to Nagothane primary health centre for postmortem. The bodies are yet to be identified.

Two bodies have been taken to government hospital at Roha for autopsy, police said.

Following the mishap, services on Konkan Railway route were suspended. Last month too, a goods train derailed on the route, affecting services.

The injured passengers are being rushed to Roha for medical treatment, police said.

Railways ordered an inquiry and Railway Minister Mallikarjun Kharge announced an ex-gratia of Rs.two lakh for those killed in the accident, Rs.50,000 for the grievously hurt and Rs.10,000 for passengers who suffered minor injuries.

Railway Board chairman Arunendra Kumar said Commissioner, Railway Safety, Chetan Bakshi will conduct the inquiry and has rushed to the site.

http://indiatoday.intoday.in/story/mumbai-train-accident-derailment-diwa-sawantwadi-express-roha/1/358961.html

Sunday 04 May 2014

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Bridge collapse in China kills 11


The death toll from the collapse of an uncompleted bridge in south China's Guangdong province has risen to 11 as of Sunday morning, said local authorities.

The stone arch bridge under construction in Liangkengkou village, Gaozhou city, collapsed at around 1:00 pm Saturday, said a publicity official of Gaozhou.

Rescuers pulled 27 people out of the debris, including five who were confirmed dead on the spot and eight others sustaining serious injuries, said the official, adding that six of the seriously wounded survivors later died in the hospital.

The unlicensed bridge was being built by the village itself. The local government ordered to suspend the project in April, but its construction resumed covertly during the past May Day holiday, said the official.

One other person had managed to get out.

He says the construction of the unlicensed bridge had been arranged by the village committee, and that three people were in police custody.

Sunday 04 May 2014

http://www.ecns.cn/2014/05-04/112159.shtml

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255 buried bodies identified in N. Afghan landslide: official


Up to 255 victims were identified out of hundreds of villagers buried under their collapsed houses in a deadly landslide Friday in northern Afghan province of Badakhshan, a provincial disaster official said Saturday.

"We have talked to relatives of victims. The disaster management department only find and registered the identification of 255 buried people out of hundreds trapped villagers in Aab Bareek village landslide of the Argo district ," Sayyed Abdullah Homayyon Dehqan, provincial director of disaster management department, told Xinhua.

He corrected earlier reports that 255 bodies were retrieved. Only three bodies were recovered, including a women and a child, he said.

The remote village located a four-hour drive from provincial capital Faizabad city, 315 km northeast of Afghan capital of Kabul.

The natural calamity was triggered by recent heavy rains in the mountainous province.

Earlier in the day, Afghan President Hamid Karzai issued an order announcing Sunday, May 4, as a national mourning day to observe the catastrophe, presidential spokeswoman Adela Raz said in her twitter account.

"There are around 1,000 houses in the village. Over 300 homes are buried. The rescue teams are still in the fear of mudsliding at the site until now," Dehqan noted.

More than 2,100 people were confirmed dead following two mudslides within an hour on midday Friday, provincial government spokesman Ahmad Naweed Froutan told local media.

No official statement was released by government to confirm the exact number of deaths as of Saturday night.

"Our estimates show that hundreds of people were buried under the mud and rubble triggered by landslide. It has been very difficult to give you a clear number of deaths and missing now," disaster official Dehqan said.

More than 4,500 villagers were evacuated to higher locations in the area surrounded by muddy hills and are living in tents. Rescue teams and security forces are distributing food and clean water to them, Dehqan said. Over 230 tons of flour had reached the village and would be distributed to villagers soon.

"I had gone to village bazaar. After I backed I could not find my home. My house turned to a grave for my four children and wife. They are under tons of mud. I cannot see their dead bodies. I do not know where to stay tonight," Peer Qual, the only survivor of a family, told Xinhua at the site.

Sunday 04 May 2014

http://english.cntv.cn/2014/05/04/ARTI1399162866729620.shtml

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Death toll rises to 10 in Colombia mine disaster


Rescue workers recovered more bodies Saturday of people killed in a landslide at an illegal gold mine in western Colombia, raising the death toll to 10, with an additional six feared dead.

Miners had been laboring with hand tools to extract gold from the open pit mine when it was hit by an avalanche of mud, rock and earth on Wednesday.

The mine employed local men and women, sometimes from the same families, but neither the workers nor the facility were properly credentialed.

"Today, we located seven bodies; those of four men and three women. And we still have six people missing," said Juan Sandoval, a civil defense spokesman in the Cauca department town of Santander de Quilichao.

Three bodies had been found earlier, so the fatalities stand at 10.

"The bodies all were located close to one another. Many of them were there with their shovels," Sandoval added.

Colombia has upwards of 14,000 mines, more than half of which operate without proper permits, officials said. The government even has confiscated heavy excavation equipment at some illegal sites.

It was the second mining accident in Colombia in less than a week.

Last Saturday in the northwestern department of Antioquia, four miners died from inhaling toxic gas in an unlicensed mine.

Colombia has upwards of 14,000 mines, more than half of which operate without proper permits, officials said. The government even has confiscated heavy excavation equipment at some illegal sites.

Sunday 04 May 2014

http://www.ndtv.com/article/world/death-toll-rises-to-10-in-colombia-mine-disaster-518003

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