Friday, 13 June 2014

Rescuers found bodies of seven miners in Donetsk region, 2 missing


Rescuers have found bodies of seven workers who died in an explosion in a mine near the city of Kirovsk (the Donetsk region), Ukraine’s emergency situations service reported on Friday.

Two miners are missing, the service says. The search and rescue operation is underway.

The explosion occurred at night on June 12 at the depth of 300 meters, where nine miners were working.

A colliery explosion occurred in the town of Kirovskoye, the Donetsk Region of Ukraine, RIA Novosti reports with reference to the State Emergency Service of Ukraine.

The agency specifies that nine miners stayed down at the moment of the explosion. Their fate is unknown.

It is reported that the gas-air mixture burst at 3:39 am (4:39 am Moscow time) on 12 June at the depth of 300 metres. No fire outbreak followed.

Operations in the mine have been currently suspended.

Friday 13 June 2014

http://voiceofrussia.com/news/2014_06_13/Bodies-of-seven-miners-found-in-Donetsk-region-5459/

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12 bodies still missing in S Korea ferry disaster


The rescue team searching for bodies inside South Korea’s sunken ferry has made no progress for finding 12 bodies still trapped within the ship.

Twelve bodies are still missing, out of which four are believed to be trapped in the third and eight in the fourth decks.

The last body was found on Sunday, bringing the number of victims to 292.

Rescue forces, including navy, coast guard and civilian divers, hoped to find the remaining bodies more quickly after removing the debris from the hull.

It is also expected that bad weather and strong underwater currents further impede the search in next days.

The lack of a common understanding among different groups engaged in the search operation has led to the withdrawal of some civilian divers, adding to the concerns of family members of those missing.

"There had been some misunderstanding among different players, but we are trying to close the gap. And all divers are now joining again and doing their best to find the missing," an official said.

The ferry capsized off South Korea’s southern coast while carrying 476 people, out of which 325 were students from a high school in the city of Ansan, just south of the capital, Seoul.

The government has faced widespread disapproval for its handling of the disaster and the rescue effort. Critics say valuable time was wasted during the first emergency call from a passenger to the coast guard office.

Friday 13 June 2014

http://en.apa.az/xeber_12_bodies_still_missing_in_s_korea_ferry_212646.html

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Thursday, 12 June 2014

Manali dam disaster: Two more bodies recovered from Beas; 13 students still missing


Two more bodies of engineering students from Hyderabad were retrieved on Thursday from the Beas river in Himachal Pradesh as the search operations gained momentum with 15 Indian Navy divers helping out.

The victims were identified as T Upendra and Gomoor Arvind Kumar by their parents, Superintendent of Police Mandi R S Negi said. The bodies were trapped in rocks and rescue teams had a tough time retrieving them, he said.

With this, the number of bodies recovered during the last four days has risen to eight, while efforts continue to trace the remaining sixteen students and a co-tour leader.

The bodies of five boys and three girls have been recovered so far and 13 boys and three girls are missing.

Meanwhile, 15 divers of the Navy joined the rescue team and an unmanned aerial vehicle has also been deployed to accelerate the search operations.

With the melting of snow in higher hills, the discharge of water in the river has increased and over 550 rescue workers from various agencies under the supervision of National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) are already engaged in the massive search operations.

National Disaster Management Authority vice chairman M Shashidhar Reddy, who reached the accident site to oversee the rescue operations, said that two more bodies were recovered from the river today.

"Our divers are facing the problem of poor visibility, the river bed is full of silt and huge boulders and rock are acting as impediments and it is only through 'feel' that the bodies are being recognised," Reddy said.

"The underwater camera did not make much success (due to muddy water) and now we are going to deploy a UAE (unmanned aerial vehicle) that will continuously recce the entire area of operation," he added.

Thursday 12 June 2014

http://ibnlive.in.com/news/manali-tragedy-two-more-bodies-recovered-from-beas-13-students-still-missing/478618-3-254.html

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Wednesday, 11 June 2014

Mass grave from Peru's 1980-2000 conflict exhumed


Forensic teams have begun the long-delayed exhumation of members of an Amazon tribe that suffered devastating losses during Peru's 1980-2000 conflict with Shining Path rebels.

The first body, unearthed over the weekend, wore the standard ocher robe of the Ashaninka, said Ivan Rivasplata, leader of the forensic anthropologists from the Peruvian Prosecutor's Office engaged in the mission with army escorts.

He said in Lima that the team hoped to exhume about 130 bodies from five common graves in two communities in the Apurimac, Ene, and Mantaro River valleys, where remnants of the Shining Path continue to exert influence, living off a vibrant cocaine trade.

About 6,000 Ashaninka were killed, 5,000 enslaved, and 10,000 forcibly displaced by the Shining Path during the conflict.

Wednesday 11 June 2014

http://www.philly.com/philly/news/nation_world/20140611_PERU.html

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Beas river tragedy: Sixth body pulled out, search operation on


Rescuers on Wednesday pulled out the sixth body from the Beas river here, two days after 24 students and a tour operator were swept away in strong currents following release of water from the Larji Dam upstream.

The massive search operation to locate the missing entered into the third day today.

Five bodies had been recovered till yesterday.

Officials said chances of recovering any survivor of the tragedy that struck Sunday evening were bleak.

Jaideep Singh, commanding officer of the National Disaster Response Force (NDRF), told IANS: "A massive search operation is on the river stretch from the accident spot to the Pandoh dam."

"A team of 84 people, comprising 20 divers of NDRF, were on the job," he said.

The Army has also deployed a team of 18 divers.

Singh said, "It seemed that most of the bodies are either trapped under the boulders or sank in the silt.

"There are few chances of bodies flowing beyond the Pandoh dam. We are regulating the outflow from the dam and expect that the swollen bodies may start surfacing tomorrow (Thursday) or day after (Friday)," he added.

The body of the fifth victim Devashish Bose was flown to Hyderabad Tuesday evening.

More than 60 students and faculty members of the VNR Vignana Jyothi Institute of Engineering and Technology in Hyderabad were on an excursion to Manali.

Some of them were getting themselves photographed on the bank of the river Sunday evening when a wall of water washed them away.

"The river level suddenly increased due to release of water from the Larji hydropower project dam, located near the accident spot, without warning," witnesses said.

The accident spot is located some 200 km from Shimla and on the border of Kullu and Mandi districts.

Wednesday 11 June 2014

http://zeenews.india.com/news/himachal-pradesh/beas-river-tragedy-sixth-body-pulled-out-search-operation-on_938664.html

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Tuesday, 10 June 2014

Italian Navy rescues 5,200 migrants and recovers three dead in Mediterranean Sea


The Italian Navy and coastguard ships have rescued 5,200 illegal migrants and recovered three bodies from over-crowded boats in the Mediterranean Sea, south of Sicily.

Recent calm seas have led to a wave of migration attempts by people leaving North African and heading to Italy, a navy spokesman told Reuters.

The spokesman added that the rescue efforts are continuing, with merchant ships and a Maltese vessel joining to support the fleet.

"Europe can't just turn its back on us."

Crew members of the merchant tanker Norient Star recovered three dead bodies; however, the cause of the deaths are unknown.

Italy strengthened its patrolling capabilities with the launch of a search-and-rescue mission called Mare Nostrum, or Our Sea, in October 2013, after a boat carrying 366 migrants fleeing African countries capsized near Sicily.

The country has been urging the European Union to join the search-and-rescue mission, but only Slovenia has responded as yet.

Sicilian port city of Porto Empedocle mayor Lillo Firetto said: "Europe can't just turn its back on us."

"This isn't just Sicily's border, but it's Europe's border, too."

The number of migrants that have reached Italy by boat this year has already exceeded last year's total of 40,000.

Last month, the Italian Navy rescued 206 migrants and recovered 17 bodies from a boat that had capsized between the island of Lampedusa and Libya.

Tuesday 10 June 2014

http://www.ship-technology.com/news/newsitalian-navy-rescues-5200-migrants-and-recovers-three-dead-4288324

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Himalayan dam disaster: 5 bodies found, 19 students still missing


Five bodies of students were found in Himachal Pradesh's Mandi district while the fate of 19 others who were washed away in Beas river that saw a flash-flood after the release of water from a hydropower project is still unknown, an official said.

The toll in Sunday's accident has risen to five, Additional Deputy Commissioner Pankaj Rai told IANS over phone on Monday. Rai said one of the bodies was recovered from Pandoh dam, whose floodgates were closed after the accident.

The dam is some 15 km downstream from the accident spot. The accident spot is located some 200 km from state capital Shimla and on the border of Kullu and Mandi districts.

At least 24 students, including six girls of the VNR Vignana Jyothi Institute of Engineering and Technology in Hyderabad, were reported missing after strong currents in the mighty Beas river washed them away.

The chances of survival of the students were bleak, officials said. More than 60 students and faculty members were on an excursion to the picturesque tourist resort of Manali.

Some of them were getting themselves photographed on the banks of the river in Thalaut area near Hanogi Mata temple when they were washed away.

The water level suddenly increased due to release of water in the river without warning from a nearby hydropower project. Chief Minister Virbhadra Singh reached the accident spot to oversee the rescue operation.

Singh ordered a probe by Divisional Commissioner Onkar Sharma into the release of water by the project authorities without a warning, said a government spokesperson.

He has ordered the suspension of erring resident engineer of the 126 MW Larji hydropower project being run by the state electricity board. A case of negligence was registered.

A team of the National Disaster Response Fund (NDRF), headed by Commandant Jaideep Singh, is likely to reach the spot by noon, official sources said. The NDRF team comprises 72 people were dispatched from Delhi.

Tuesday 10 June 2014

http://www.firstpost.com/india/beas-mishap-5-bodies-found-19-students-still-missing-1562115.html

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Saturday, 7 June 2014

Flooding in Afghanistan kills 50 people and leaves thousands homeless


Flooding in a remote part of northern Afghanistan has killed more than 50 people and forced thousands to flee their homes, officials have said.

It was the latest in a string of deadly flash floods, landslides and avalanches in Afghanistan's rugged northern mountains, where roads are poor and many villages are virtually cut off from the rest of the country.

Lt Fazel Rahman, the police chief in the Guzirga i-Nur district of the north-eastern Baghlan province, said on Saturday that 54 bodies have been recovered, including the remains of women and children, but many others are still missing. He said the death toll could climb to 100 and called for emergency assistance from the central government.

"So far no one has come to help us. People are trying to find their missing family members," Rahman said, adding that the district's police force was overstretched by the scale of the disaster.

An exact death toll remained unclear. A statement from President Hamid Karzai's office said 58 people had been killed, while others put the toll higher.

General Mohammad Zahir Azimi, spokesman for the Afghan defence ministry, said two army helicopters had been sent to the area to provide assistance.

The Afghanistan natural disaster management authority began shipping out stockpiles of food and other supplies in Baghlan province to the affected area, said Mohammad Aslim Sayas, deputy director of the agency.

He said a delegation was sent to the affected villages to assess their needs.

Guzirga i-Nur district is located more than 85 miles (140km) north of the provincial capital, Puli Khumri.

Jawed Basharat, the spokesman for the Baghlan provincial police, said they were aware of the flooding, but that it would take eight to nine hours for them to reach the area by road.

Afghans living in the northern mountains have largely been spared from the country's decades of war, but are no strangers to natural disasters.

Last month, a landslide triggered by heavy rain buried large sections of a remote north-eastern village in the Badakhshan province which borders China, displacing some 700 families. Authorities have yet to provide an exact figure on the number of dead from the 2 May landslide, and estimates have ranged from 250 to 2,700. Officials say it will be impossible to dig up all the bodies.

A landslide in Baghlan province in 2012 killed 71 people. After days of digging unearthed only five bodies, authorities decided to halt the recovery effort and turn the area into a memorial for the dead.

Saturday 07 June 2014

http://www.theguardian.com/world/2014/jun/07/afghanistan-flash-flooding-landslides

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Death toll in the Sewol ferry tragedy has now climbed to 290


Two more bodies have been found this week; 14 people are still missing, presumed dead.

A search team recovered another body from the submerged Sewol ferry in South Korea on Friday, raising the death toll to 290. The government’s disaster-response team said that military, coast guard and civilian divers discovered the body of the male victim on the third deck of the capsized ferry and are awaiting confirmation of his identity. Fourteen people remain missing.

The retrieved body is the second found this week after a lull in recoveries since May 21. On Thursday, a body was found floating 25 miles (40 km) away from the site of the sunken ship. In a statement, the government task force said it used fingerprints to identify the body as a passenger from the ship. The victim was traveling on the doomed vessel with his wife and two sons to Jeju Island.

The rescue teams are now planning to break the hull around the third and fourth floors of the ship to enter inside the still inaccessible cabins where more bodies are believed to be trapped.

Apart from third and fourth floors, the rescuers are combing the foyer of the fifth floor.

The authorities have ruled out the possibility of pulling the ship out of the water until the families of the victims still believed to be trapped give their consent.

The 6,825-tonne Sewol was sailing from Incheon city, east to Seoul, to the southern island of Jeju when it sank facing the southeastern coast of the Korean peninsula with over 300 passengers aboard.

Investigations revealed that the ferry was carrying triple its capacity, and had gone through remodelling two years ago to extend it capacity.

Saturday 07 June 2014

http://time.com/2836274/sewol-ferry-south-korea-toll-290/ http://www.newstrackindia.com/newsdetails/2014/06/06/199--Another-body-recovered-from-sunken-South-Korean-ferry-.html

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Marshall Islands: World War II skeletons washed from graves by rising seas


Skeletons of World War II soldiers are being washed from their graves by the rising Pacific Ocean as global warming leads to inundation of islands that saw some of the fiercest fighting of the conflict.

On the day Europe commemorates the 70th anniversary of the storming of Normandy beaches in the D-Day landings, a minister from the Marshall Islands, a remote archipelago between Hawaii and the Philippines, told how the remains of 26, probably Japanese soldiers, had been recovered so far on the isle of Santo.

“There are coffins and dead people being washed away from graves; it’s that serious,” Tony de Brum, minister of foreign affairs for the Marshall Islands, said today. Tides “have caused not just inundation and flooding of communities where people live but have also done severe damage in undermining regular land so that even the dead are affected.”

Spring tides from the end of February to April had flooded communities, he told a group of reporters at the latest round of United Nations climate talks in Bonn.

The minister’s comments bring home the stark future for low-lying island nations as the planet warms, causing sea levels to rise. The Marshall Islands, a string of more than 1,000 such isles with a population of about 70,000, is about 2 meters (7 feet) at its highest point, according to de Brum.

The tropical western Pacific is a region the UN said this week is experiencing almost four times the global average rate of sea level increase, with waters creeping up by 12 millimeters (half an inch) a year between 1993 and 2009. The global average pace is 3.2 millimeters a year.

“Communities in the Marshalls, because we are atolls, are either along the lagoon shoreline or the ocean shoreline,” de Brum said. “If you want to move away from traditional community sites, you are moving inland for a few yards and then you’re already moving closer to the ocean on the other side. So there’s not very much room for maneuver.”

The UN projects the global average sea level may increase 26 centimeters to 98 centimeters (10 inches to 39 inches) by the end of the century.

The Marshall Islands were used as a base by the Japanese Navy in the run-up to the attack on Pearl Harbor during WWII. The U.S. Navy based at Pearl Harbor is now testing the skeletons washed up to identify and repatriate them, according to de Brum.

“We think they’re Japanese soldiers, but there are no broken bones or any indication of being war casualties,” he said. “We think maybe it was suicide or something similar. The Japanese are sending a team into help us in September.”

Friday 06 June 2014

http://www.bloomberg.com/news/2014-06-06/world-war-ii-skeletons-washed-from-graves-by-rising-seas.html

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Yemen: 60 African migrants drown as boat capsizes off coast


Sixty migrants from Somalia and Ethiopia have drowned in the worst disaster to occur off the coast of Yemen this year, the United Nations has said.

Two Yemeni crew members also died when the boat capsized in the Red Sea.

"The tragedy is the largest single loss of life this year of migrants and refugees attempting to reach Yemen via the Red Sea and the Gulf of Aden," the UN's refugee agency said.

After the incident, witnesses said that the bodies of dozens of illegal immigrants were found on the beaches of Yemen.

Approximately 50 bodies were found and buried near the town of Zoubab. Local residents used a bulldozer to bury the migrants in a mass grave.

An unnamed official said that the capsized boat was one of two which were travelling in convoy.

The first boat, holding the 60 immigrants, capsized while the second boat, carrying 45 migrants, was captured and those on board were arrested.

This week, Yemen's Ministry of the Interior released a statement saying that up to 2,500 African immigrants arrived in Yemen in May via boats from Somalia.

This influx has led to fears within the country that some Somali members of al-Shabaab may be disguising themselves as immigrants to sneak into the country, which already acts as a haven for al-Qaida in the Arabian Peninsula (AQAP) militants.

Friday 06 June 2014

http://www.ibtimes.co.uk/yemen-60-african-migrants-drown-boat-capsizes-off-coast-1451544

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Two more bodies pulled from collapsed Samarinda shophouse


Police searching for survivors under a collapsed shophouse construction have pulled two more bodies from the rubble, bringing the death toll to 11 and leaving one person unaccounted for, police said.

“The team is still searching but the remaining victim has not been found,” Samarinda Police chief Sr. Comr. Antonius Wisnu said on Friday. “We believe there is only one more victim trapped under the debris, and we’re all still searching for him.”

Eighty four workers were trapped inside the Cendrawash Permai house when the half-constructed building collapsed on Tuesday. Seventy two workers managed to escape from the building. Two were found alive on Tuesday, but later died in the hospital. The other nine were found dead between Tuesday and Friday.

The latest victims found on Friday were identified as Toni, 35, and Jono, 50. Both men were from Ponorogo, East Java.

The bodies of seven victims have been sent to their hometowns after identification by the East Kalimantan Disaster Victim-Identification team. The other men will be returned to their families soon.

The early investigation shows the contractors did not construct the building according to the plans submitted to the permit office, allegedly skimping on the steel frame and diluting the concrete mix.

Friday 06 June 2014

http://www.thejakartaglobe.com/news/update-two-bodies-pulled-collapsed-samarinda-shophouse/

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Friday, 6 June 2014

Torrential rain kills 23, displaces thousands in Sri Lanka


Nearly 150 schools have been closed, 23 people died and thousands more displaced as Sri Lanka grapples with rains that have lashed the island for days, an official said on Wednesday.

Torrential rain lashed much of the western and central parts of the country resulting in flash floods, toppled buildings and disrupted lives.

Local media have estimated about 27,200 people have been displaced by the floods and landslides. Over 40 houses have been completely destroyed due to heavy rainfall and subsequent flooding in six districts while another 101 homes have been partially damaged.

Majority of the deaths and damage have been reported from the Kalutara District in the western province and relief efforts are continuing, Disaster Management Minister Mahinda Amaraweera told reporters.

Friday 06 June 2014

http://www.globalpost.com/dispatch/news/xinhua-news-agency/140604/torrential-rain-kills-23-displaces-thousands-sri-lanka

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Gaul families still wait on Russians for bodies inspection


Efforts are continuing to send a team to Russia to help identify the remains of up to 10 men who could be crew members of Hull supertrawler the Gaul.

The remains, which had been buried in a cave by local people, were discovered in 2012 by a Russian official.

A letter from Humberside Police to relatives says the team would be made up of three police officers and a forensic anthropologist, but that no date has been set.

West Hull and Hessle MP Alan Johnson has written to the Foreign and Commonwealth Office (FCO) to lend his support, it adds.

All the families of the 36 men lost when the Gaul sank in a storm in February 1974 were asked to provide DNA samples.

At least five sets of remains, but not more than 10, were placed under rocks on the remote Rybachy peninsula in the Murmansk region after being washed up in 1974 or 1975. The letter said: “We are continuing to have discussions with the FCO regarding the possibility of a team visiting Russia to review what identification options are open to us. If the planned visit goes ahead we will inform you of the dates.”

A spokeswoman for the force said the purpose of the visit would be for assessment initially: “We want to send a team at the earliest opportunity but no date has been set yet. We are working in partnership with the FCO to facilitate the visit because the jurisdiction lies with the Russian authorities and we need their permission to be there.”

Friday 06 June 2014

http://www.yorkshirepost.co.uk/news/main-topics/general-news/gaul-families-still-wait-on-russians-for-bodies-inspection-1-6657558

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Remains of 37 persons recovered in Rudnica so far


The remains of 37 people have so far been exhumed from the Rudnica quarry, southern Serbia.

The news agency is quoting the head of the Commission for Missing Persons, Veljko Odaloviฤ‡, who made the statement as he was visiting the location.

It is believed that ethnic Albanians who died during the 1999 war in Kosovo were buried at the site.

"The process goes on and 37 bodies have been recovered so far," he told reporters on Thursday, adding that the exhumation would continue throughout June.

The commission will insist that the exhumation be complete and conducted in a highly expert, responsible and sufficiently transparent way, he noted.

"I believe we will have to use much more time with new searches and a new location," he stated.

The exhumation will continue as before, with the presence of EULEX officials, a delegation from Pristina, International Committee of the Red Cross and the International Commission on Missing Persons, he pointed out.

Besides Odaloviฤ‡, the location in Rudnica was visited also by UN Assistant Secretary General for Peacekeeping Operation Edmond Mulet and Head of UNMIK Farid Zarif.

Mulet told reporters he had come to Rudnica to have a closer look at the efforts invested as part of a partnership of a number of international organisations, adding that it was obvious the exhumation was fully transparent and very professional.

"This is a sad sight, since it is the scene of a crime, but the work will be continued," he stated, adding that it was important work meant to locate the remains of people gone missing during the conflict in Kosovo.

Friday 06 June 2014

http://www.b92.net/eng/news/crimes.php?yyyy=2014&mm=06&dd=06&nav_id=90591

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The Challenge of Counting D-Day’s Dead


In 2000, Carol Tuckwiller was handed the monumental task of identifying every Allied soldier who died on June 6, 1944, during the World War II invasion of German-held Normandy. The former librarian spent six years tracking down nearly 4,400 names.

She combed through military records, contacted government agencies worldwide and separated myth from fact — piling up boxes of evidence on shelves of a former liquor store in Bedford, Virginia. She finally gave up the chase not because every last dead soldier was accounted for, but because her leads ran dry.

Seventy years after D-Day, no one really knows how many of the more than 150,000 Normandy invaders died that day. And no one will ever know for sure. Too many of the invaders went missing, and too many other priorities on the chaotic French beaches that day crowded out the task of recording casualties.

We know more now than ever before, though, in large part because of Tuckwiller. She “conducted heroic research,” said William A. McIntosh, who as director of education for the National D-Day Memorial Foundation oversaw her work.1

The result of Tuckwiller’s effort is visible to visitors at the National D-Day Memorial in Bedford, where plaques bear the name of the soldiers who died on D-Day. Her work is also beginning to correct the historical record, as museums and historians acknowledge that at least 4,413 Allied soldiers died, far more than many previously believed.

Revisions to death totals during wars aren’t unusual. The U.S. Civil War, World War I and the Korean War all have had their death-toll estimates revised — even decades later.

It’s harder still to get a count for a single day in a single battle or campaign. Soldiers who are gravely wounded one day but die of their wounds early the next morning don’t normally count toward the day’s total. Nor do soldiers whose bodies are never found. Tombstones at U.S. battlefield cemeteries mark a date of death when one is available, but not every Allied soldier who died on any given day during World War II did so while participating in that day’s big battle. And many surviving American families during World War II requested bodies of dead soldiers be repatriated to the U.S., where they are scattered in cemeteries around the country.

Add to those challenges all the unique circumstances of the landings on Normandy’s beaches on June 6, 1944, and you have a recipe for plenty of uncertainty.

“I started from zero,” Tuckwiller, 67, said. She added names and knowledge along the way. For instance, she realized she’d have to study deaths recorded on June 7, 1945, because soldiers missing in action were declared dead after a year and a day.

As she worked, she learned why the records were so murky. Some clerks who would have kept the data died in the invasion. Some veterans told her that, in the chaos of the day, they started in one unit and ended up fighting with another.

“The scale of D-Day, combined with the destructive power of the weapons in the field, add to the usual fog of war to make accounting difficult,” Michael Ray, a research editor at Encyclopaedia Britannica, wrote in an email. “A body struck by an artillery shell could be, essentially, erased, and that’s just one of the possible fates that faced those who went ashore or jumped into Normandy. Seventy years after the landings, the unidentified remains of soldiers killed in the fighting are still being turned up by farmers and amateur archaeologists.”

“What do you do about any potential casualties on June 5?” such as aircraft taking off from England that crashed, Timothy Nosal, spokesman for the American Battle Monuments Commission, asked. “What about casualties early on June 7? Like any other statistic, you have to consider what you’re going to factor in. It’s a difficult equation to jumble.”

Recording casualties was “secondary to actual operations,” Nosal said. On quieter days during the war, each unit would file a morning report. Last November, Nosal researched morning reports around D-Day and found that few of the units involved filed one on June 6 or June 7. “In most cases, they were not filed until the 8th, and most of those were handwritten and typed later in June,” he said.

The high number of history buffs, veterans and their families who are touring Normandy or visiting World War II sites around this week’s anniversary will find that museums and tour operators often struggle with how to present the uncertain information.

“We have found that tallying deaths/casualties on D-Day is a complicated topic, and there is still disagreement amongst scholars,” Kacey M. Hill, a spokeswoman for the National WWII Museum in New Orleans, said in an email. Others try not to cite numbers.

“I personally try to spend as little time as possible talking stats as it gets so complicated,” Normandy tour guide Paul Woodadge said in an email. “I focus on personal stories.”

The U.S. military’s historical arm isn’t seeking to update its count. “Any attempt would probably be equally inaccurate and would be based on the same statistics used in earlier counts,” R. Scott Moore, chief of field programs and historical resources at the U.S. Army Center of Military History, said in an email.

Moore believes that many of the same limitations faced on D-Day would apply to combat today. “The differences today, given computer-based systems and central accounting processes, is exponentially better; no comparison,” he said. “But I expect that if you conducted an operation today on the scale of D-Day with the kind of casualties that would ensue, we would still have difficulty accounting for every casualty. When an individual disappears at the waterline, or alone in the forest at night after parachuting from an airplane, and no one sees it, how do you account for that soldier?”

Tuckwiller tried to do just that.

As the National D-Day Memorial Foundation officials were readying their memorial for its 2001 unveiling, Tuckwiller was looking for a new gig. She had worked 31 years in the Virginia room of the Roanoke Public Libraries before retiring in January 2000. She wrote to the foundation on a lark: “I said, you’re so new, you may not know what positions you need, but if there is anything I can do to help you, here’s my rรฉsumรฉ,” she recalled in a telephone interview this week.

A few months later, she was hired to run a new program for the foundation: the Necrology Project. Its goal was to collect the names of every Normandy invader who died on June 6, 1944 — basically, to do what historians and military officials hadn’t been able to do before.

“I thought it was exciting because I was too dumb to know it was going to be so difficult,” Tuckwiller recalled. “But I like a challenge. I always love searching for information.”

Tuckwiller started looking for sources, using her library skills and what she’d learned from her father, David E. Tuckwiller, an Army Air Corps veteran. He’d hardly talked about the war until the 1980s, when she signed him up for a group of veterans of his old unit, which prompted him to show her the spiral notebook he kept of every mission. “It was the first time he had ever really opened up,” she said. He died last July.

As she began her search for D-Day’s dead, Tuckwiller said she realized she had underestimated the task. “It became quite clear why it hadn’t been done. It was just crazy.”

She sent letters to the embassies of U.S. allies. She contacted the American Battle Monuments Commission, military historical societies and the Joint Mortuary Affairs Center in Fort Lee, Virginia. She made nine trips to the Military Personnel Records at the National Archive in St. Louis, and many more to the U.S. National Archives and Records Administration in College Park, Maryland.

Tuckwiller fought through discouraging moments. Some told her what she wanted to do just couldn’t be done. But she also found that almost everyone wanted to help.

She derived the greatest pleasure from speaking to veterans and their families, though those conversations didn’t always yield the sort of hard evidence she needed. One woman she spoke to was sure her relative had died on D-Day. She and Tuckwiller spoke for several months, until it became clear he’d been wounded on June 6th and taken back to England, where he died the next day.

Tuckwiller started recording all her data — including maybes, soldiers for whom she needed more information — in a spreadsheet, then a database. She also kept paper records for every soldier, which along with the World War II reference library she maintained started to overflow from the foundation’s headquarters. The foundation rented a vacated liquor store a block from the office, with sturdy shelves strong enough for booze bottles, or photocopied army records.

Her progress was slow but steady. By the time President George W. Bush spoke at the unveiling of the memorial on the 57th anniversary of D-Day in 2001, Tuckwiller’s efforts yielded enough names to fill about 20 plaques, each with about 20 names.

The foundation faced financial troubles during Tuckwiller’s tenure, but she said she never felt financial pressure, nor was she rushed to finish the work. She tried to keep trip costs down, staying in budget hotels and getting food from relatives. She said she made about $35,000 a year. Asked if it was a labor of love, she said, “Oh, absolutely, exclamation point.”

Tuckwiller loved the chase, but she didn’t lose sight of its meaning to survivors. When she saw family members rub papers against the plaques bearing their loved ones’ names, to keep the rubbings, “that was very touching to me,” she said.

Six years into her search, “It had gotten to the point where I just didn’t know where else to look,” she said. She no longer enjoyed the commute to work as much as she once did. “So I thought, well, I’ll just leave it at this point, with the understanding it will never be closed.”

When she left, the total count for Allied deaths on D-Day was 4,390.

While the result of Tuckwiller’s work was a count of Allied dead higher than many historians had tallied before, it was also lower than what many people expect to hear, according to tour operators. The carnage of the invasion scenes in the movie “Saving Private Ryan,” the scope of the mission and a confusion of casualty counts with death counts all played a role in those expectations.

D-Day planners, too, were surprised by the low death count — they’d feared as many as half the invaders, or 75,000 soldiers, would be killed or wounded on the day of the invasion.

“That’s a testament to Allied planning,” Nosal, the American Battle Monuments Commission spokesman, said.

Tuckwiller continued to contribute after leaving the foundation, including checking on names a staffer found in military cemeteries with D-Day as their death date. Tuckwiller found that all but two of the deaths were unrelated to the Normandy invasion. With this and other continued research, the count has slowly climbed to 4,413.

Today she is retired. She volunteers once a week at the Veteran Affairs medical center in Salem, Virginia, where she recently helped a Korean War veteran who’d discarded his discharge papers recover some of his records.

On Tuckwiller’s last visit to the National Archive in St. Louis before she left the foundation, an archivist there showed her a room filled with boxes, each box filled with files that hadn’t yet been cataloged. “I was drooling to get a hold of that information,” she said. “Maybe if somebody comes back in 15 years, it will be cataloged.” She’ll be 82 in 15 years, but it was clear that she hoped that “somebody” would be her.

Friday 06 June 2014

http://fivethirtyeight.com/features/the-challenge-of-counting-d-days-dead/

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Thursday, 5 June 2014

Binghamton Clothing Company fire of 1913 was Broome's deadliest disaster


It was a bright, sunny summer day in Binghamton. On July 22, 1913, the workers of the Binghamton Clothing Company on Wall Street were hard at work. The 100 employees of Reed Freeman’s firm were busy making men’s overalls in the four-story brick building.

Freeman was a respectable business owner who lived nearby on Pine Street and treated his employees fairly well. He had practiced fire drills and kept a log of all employees and customers comings and goings. Although the building did not have any fire escapes and workers relied on a single wooden staircase located in the middle of the building, it was considered safe by the standards at the time.

No one thought that it was unsafe, especially since it was only about a block away from the central fire station on Chenango Street. And on that particular day, there was a fireman’s convention in town — what could be safer?

On that afternoon, in the basement of the building near the staircase a pile of clothing remnants somehow caught fire. It has never been determined whether it was employee arson or an accident, but flames quickly spread to the staircase. The open air acted as a catalyst and pulled the fire upwards toward the floors where workers — mainly immigrant women, toiled away at their jobs.

The smell of smoke and flames were quickly discovered, and the alarm was sent out to evacuate. Some of the women hesitated since they often worked without their heavy, woolen skirts and were afraid of embarrassment. Others went back for purses and coats, only to be trapped by the fire, which engulfed the building in less than 10 minutes.

To add to the misery, the wooden staircase was now in flames, trapping many on the third and fourth floors. Two workers, Sidney Dimmock and floor supervisor Nellie Connor, stayed behind to get as many workers out as possible. Connor yelled for the women to get out. Dimmock went back in to get Connor as the flames took control of the structure. Neither got out.

Many others trapped were either lost in the flames or leapt to their deaths from the upper stories through the windows. Reed Freeman kept trying to get workers out while his wife stayed in the office and placed two frantic telephone calls to the fire department for help. At the last minute before becoming trapped herself, she grabbed the log book and ran out the front door.

As the fire department arrived and tried valiantly to quell the inferno, the building collapsed on itself — less than 15 minutes after the fire was discovered. The flames singed the post office building next door, and fears of the block going up in flames were very real.

When the smoldering ruins were cool enough, the arduous task of looking for victims began. In the next couple of weeks, several injured victims died, and eventually the death toll reached 32 people. It was and continues to be Broome County’s worst disaster in terms of human loss.

Although it was known who died, 18 of the bodies of the victims were burned beyond recognition. A mass burial for those victims was held at the Stone Opera House on Chenango Street, and the coffins were transported on a flatbed trolley car to Spring Forest Cemetery to be buried in a mass circular burial on top of small knoll. A granite marker listing those victims sits in the circle of marker stones.

Today, the site of the building has a marker denoting its location. The Binghamton Fire Department maintains the gravesite of the victims. The families of Nellie and Sidney can proudly know that their relatives gave their lives to protect others. The state held a factory fire investigation that resulted in the addition of sprinkler systems and fire escapes to all future factories. From this horrendous disaster, we should always remember those that we lost and how the safety of those around us should always be foremost.

Thursday 05 June 2014

http://www.pressconnects.com/article/20140604/NEWS01/306040032/Spanning-Time-Binghamton-Clothing-Company-fire-1913-Broome-s-deadliest-disaster?nclick_check=1

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Testimony through the graves of Guatemala


On June 2, 1982, armed members of the Guatemalan military walked into the village of Pambach. They separated men from the women and children, then took about 80 men from the village down into the valley. They told the women that the men were being conscripted to serve in the military and would be back in two years.

Later that day, the same group of men were taken to a forest near the town of Tactic where they were butchered -- bludgeoned, beaten, stabbed -- and left as a carpet of corpses on the forest floor.

The next day, the military returned with trucks and moved 84 corpses to Military Zone 21 military base. Unknown to them, one man had survived the massacre despite near fatal wounds. He eventually made his way back to Pambach and broke the news to the women that they would never see their menfolk again. And indeed they never did. They were the latest "disappeared."

The old military base still exists today. It is now a U.N. Peacekeepers training base, run by the Guatemalan military. It is also home to 533 corpses of Guatemalan "disappeared" who did not in fact disappear. They were murdered in cold blood then buried at the base away from prying eyes, but now the evidence is speaking from the grave.

Fredy Pecerelli is a forensic anthropologist who, with his team of experts, has been scouring the countryside of Guatemala for hard evidence of atrocities committed during the civil war from 1960-1996. At its height in 1982, Pambach was one of many Mayan villages accused of supporting guerillas, and purged -- which often meant the wholesale slaughter of its men, women and children.

Sifting through the 533 corpses at the U.N. training base, 49 bodies have been positively identified by Pecerelli's team, 13 from the village of Pambach.

After extensive forensic tests, six of the corpses were being returned to their families 32 years to the day since they were forcibly removed and murdered. Small wooden coffins were loaded into a flatbed truck. Each contained the lab remains of one victim. The truck set off for Pambach. I was in the next vehicle with Fredy. A backup vehicle followed as we wound our way through steep hills in pouring rain, a six hour funeral cortรจge high into the hills.

Clouds drifted across the landscape occluding the peaks. Deep mud and drizzle dampen the dirty school where six sparkling varnished coffins adorned with flowers are lined up. The schoolyard is full as 250 family members await the arrival of their loved one's remains.

They had done this once before, when the first six identified corpses were returned. There was an air of procedure and expectancy about the ceremony, but it was not religious or liturgical; it was more like a wedding or bar mitzvah -- a mic, a band, expectant relatives. But there was also sorrow clinging to the families like the clouds hugging the hills.

A sudden commotion caught my attention at the end of the courtyard. Standing there were what looked like a military commander in fatigues and a red beret. Closer examination revealed teenagers with fake blood and wooden guns wearing former U.S. Army issue combat wear. It was the beginning of a memorial play, in which children from the local school became perpetrators and victims as they re-enacted the events of 32 years ago. It was chilling to see grandchildren of the disappeared dressed to kill or waiting to be killed.

"They need to learn and this is a good way," says a woman in her 40s.

Large candle flames wafted in the breeze as brightly clad Mayan women with babies strapped to their backs listened as older family members gave their eulogies to their long lost dead.

None of this would be happening at Pambach without the work of Guatemalan Forensic Anthropology Foundation (FAFG), which began over 20 years ago by Pecerelli. It is tough work, digging through corpses and confronting the past they reveals. There are few people in power today in Guatemala who will gain from FAFG's painstaking work and so support is hard to come by. It is easier to forget after all.

No one is immune. Perez Molina, the current president of Guatemala was in a senior intelligence role in the Kaibile -- the special forces responsible for murders similar to those at Pambach among the 200,000 mainly Mayans whowere murdered by the military.

"We can only dig where the prosecutor allows us to," says Pecerelli, pointing out that the exhumations are not for memorial purposes -- they are all criminal investigations. FAFG is interested in ending impunity and meticulously document the evidence as a part of the judicial process.

There have been some judicial victories. In 2013, former Guatemalan president, Efrain Rios Montt who oversaw the most brutal phase of the genocide from 1982 to 1983, was convicted for the crime of genocide. While there have been setbacks, the fact remains that Guatemala was the first state in the Americas to allow a former head of state to stand trial for genocide.

"It was in part the excellent forensic expert witnesses of FAFG who had painstakingly pieced together the evidence that led to a successful conviction," points out New York human rights lawyer, Scott Greathead, who is traveling with us. In addition to evidence produced in Guatemala, U.S. filmmaker Pamela Yates interviewed Montt during the crisis, provided the outtakes. Montt confirmed on camera that he was in control of the military, thereby confirming line of command to the state-sponsored murder that happened at villages such a Pambach.

The speeches in the compound ended. Flowers and candles were passed around. Men from each family stepped forward and lifted the large shiny coffins onto their shoulders, small coffins with human remains are hoisted onto single shoulders; others carried bouquets. One by one, the families formed their own cortรจge on foot and streamed out of the compound splitting in several directions, with one family snaking up hill and another winding down into the sodden valley.

A crowd gathered at each house for a wake with a difference. In the dimly lit wooden two roomed house 50 people squeezed in, passing chicken soup and tamales as the small coffin with the remains returned from the lab and the shiny new coffin were both opened. The family watched on transfixed, as the lab technician performed her final act with bones she had already handled scores of times. First she laid a silk lining in the coffin. She then placed a pillow where the head would rest, then she took brown envelopes each containing bones, shoes, tattered clothing. Piece by piece she placed the skeleton in its position, a pair of wrinkled decayed shoes neatly placed where feet would have been. She wrapped the white silk lining over the skeleton, then the shiny lid was gently closed.

After 32 years, six more of the disappeared are finally home tonight.

Thursday 05 June 2014

http://www.huffingtonpost.com/stephen-d-smith/testimony-through-the-gra_b_5441536.html

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Victim of S Korea ferry disaster found miles away


The body of a victim of South Korea's ferry disaster has been found miles away from the sunken vessel, rescuers said Thursday, fuelling fears that some of the deceased may never be found.

Since the 6,825-tonne Sewol ferry sank off the southwest coast on April 16, 289 bodies have now been recovered, leaving 15 unaccounted for.

The ship was carrying a total of 476 people -- mostly high school students on a school trip.

Even though no bodies have been recovered from the interior over the past two weeks, divers have continued searching the submerged vessel in extremely hazardous conditions.

Two divers have been killed so far -- the latest just last week.

The late diver was recruited to help cut open a wall of the boat in an effort to find the remaining bodies believed to be obstructed by furniture and ferry parts that collapsed when the ship capsized and sank.

Most of the bodies have been found inside the cabins but dozens have been found outside the ship, according the mission. Nets had been set up in the perimeter in order to prevent bodies from drifting away.

As of Thursday, 15 people remain missing and 289 passengers and crew members are confirmed dead.

The body found Thursday by a local fisherman was floating at sea 40 kilometres (25 miles) northwest of the sunken ship, the maritime ministry said.

Fingerprint tests confirmed the person was one of the missing passengers.

The recovery will underscore warnings that other bodies may have been washed far from the rescue site by the strong currents -- and that some may never be recovered.

Thursday 05 June 2014

http://www.channelnewsasia.com/news/asiapacific/victim-of-s-korea-ferry/1137818.html

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Wednesday, 4 June 2014

Bosnia floods unearth wartime mass grave


Floods in Bosnia last month have unearthed a secret mass grave containing corpses with hands tied behind their backs, apparently Muslim Bosniak victims of the country's 1992-1995 war, an official said on Tuesday.

"We unearthed four complete bodies whose hands were tied behind their backs and two incomplete bodies today," said Lejla Cengic, spokeswoman of the government's Institute for Missing Persons, adding that exhumations will continue.

Forensic experts are combing the banks of the Bosna river for another six victims still missing from a group of 16 killed by Bosnian Serb forces nearby, Cengic said. Four other victims from the group were found nearby during earlier exhumations.

Devastating floods across Bosnia, Serbia and Croatia last month struck particularly hard in the central and northern parts of impoverished Bosnia, submerging completely the central towns of Doboj and Maglaj and northern towns of Samac and Orasje.

"We assume the victims are Bosniaks from the nearby village Jablanica, the men aged from 19 to 57," Cengic said as bulldozers removed mud from the river bank and forensic experts cleared garbage and branches from the site.

Electricity workers repairing power lines on the outskirts of the town found some victims' remains after flood waters that reached up to three metres high in Doboj receded.

Some 35,000 people went missing in Bosnia during the war. About 8,000 are still unaccounted for while 1,000 have been found but not identified yet, Cengic said.

Doboj is located on the border demarcating Bosnia's two autonomous regions established after the war, the Serb Republic and the Federation dominated by Bosniaks and Croats.

The town belongs to the Serb region but its southern part is in the Federation. When the Bosna river burst its banks, the first help came from the nearby towns in the Federation spared from the flooding. At least nine people drowned in the flooding.

Wednesday 04 June 2014

http://www.independent.ie/incoming/bosnia-floods-unearth-grim-wartime-mass-grave-30326308.html

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