An interior ministry commission report released on Wednesday on disappearances in Italy said that 28 people go missing daily throughout the country.
The figure is 10% higher than 2011 numbers.
Since 1974 when the missing persons databank was founded, 25,453 people have vanished without trace. Of these, 9,396 were Italians and 16,057 foreigners, 14,855 adults and 10,598 minors.
Compared to December 31, 2011, the report said that 541 more men, women and children were declared missing and have yet to be found. The total number of missing persons increased between the period of June 30, 2011 from 105,092 to 115,366 in June 30, 2012. The largest increase in disappearances was recorded over the last six months, up 4.78%.
Commission head Michele Penta said that the only data lower than recorded by last year's report were the number of unidentified bodies. On January 30, 2012 there were 831 unidentified corpses, one less than the last 2011 survey.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.ansa.it/web/notizie/rubriche/english/2012/10/31/Approximately-28-people-disappear-daily-Italy_7722239.html?utm_source=twitterfeed&utm_medium=twitter
Compilation of international news items related to large-scale human identification: DVI, missing persons,unidentified bodies & mass graves
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Wednesday, 31 October 2012
3 more bodies recovered from Gayari
ISLAMABAD: Due to continued efforts by the Pakistan Army, three more bodies of soldiers were recovered from Gayari Sector of Siachen on Wednesday, bringing the total number of bodies recovered so far to 101.
According to a spokesman of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), 140 soldiers, including some civilians, were buried under an avalanche on April 7 in Gayari Sector near Skardu.
According to an ISPR press release, since then, over 300 soldiers and 50 engineering plants are employed at a search operation.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\11\01\story_1-11-2012_pg7_7
According to a spokesman of Inter-Services Public Relations (ISPR), 140 soldiers, including some civilians, were buried under an avalanche on April 7 in Gayari Sector near Skardu.
According to an ISPR press release, since then, over 300 soldiers and 50 engineering plants are employed at a search operation.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.dailytimes.com.pk/default.asp?page=2012\11\01\story_1-11-2012_pg7_7
130 missing in Rohingya boat sinking, say police
About 130 people are missing after a boat carrying Rohingya refugees who were headed for Malaysia sank off Bangladesh, according to Bangladesh police and a Rohingya advocacy group on Wednesday.
Hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya have fled Myanmar in past decades to escape persecution, often heading to neighbouring Bangladesh, and recent unrest has triggered another exodus.
Mohammad Farhad, police inspector at Teknaf on the southeast tip of Bangladesh, told AFP that one survivor from the sinking on the border between Bangladesh and Myanmar reported that the boat had about 135 passengers on board.
“The boat was heading to Malaysia illegally,” Farhad said, adding that the 24-year-old survivor was being held in custody. “He does not know what happened to the others as it was dark and he was desperate to save his own life.”
Farhad said a total of six survivors were reported to have been picked up by a fishing vessel after the refugee boat left Sabrang village in Bangladesh on Saturday.
"We have spoken to families of missing passengers," he said.
There were conflicting reports about whether all those on the boat were Rohingya and also over the time of the sinking, which Bangladesh police said occurred early Sunday.
"We learned that an overcrowded boat with 133 people on board, which was leaving for Malaysia, sank," Chris Lewa, the Bangkok-based director of The Arakan Project, a Rohingya advocacy group, said.
"Six survivors have been rescued by fishing boats. The others are missing," she told AFP.
Lewa however said her organisation had been told that the accident happened overnight Monday to Tuesday.
At least 89 people have been killed and tens of thousands have fled their homes in a new wave of communal unrest sweeping Myanmar's western Rakhine state, where violence between Rohingya and Buddhists in June left dozens dead.
Since the unrest erupted, Bangladesh has been turning away boatloads of fleeing Rohingya.
The policy has been criticised by the United Nations but Bangladesh said it was already burdened with an estimated 300,000 Rohingya.
Many Rohingya refugees now try to head to Muslim-majority Malaysia for a better life. Officials said Bangladesh coastguards had yet to find any bodies after the sinking. "We could not start a search and rescue operation as the survivor could not confirm to us the position of the accident," acting administrator of Cox's Bazaar district Jasim Uddin told AFP.
"The coastguard is on alert to watch for bodies on the shore."
Myanmar's 800,000 stateless Rohingya, described by the United Nations as among the world's most persecuted minorities, are seen by the government and many Burmese as illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/world/130+missing+in+Rohingya+boat+sinking+say+police/-/1068/1608462/-/t003e1/-/index.html
Hundreds of thousands of Muslim Rohingya have fled Myanmar in past decades to escape persecution, often heading to neighbouring Bangladesh, and recent unrest has triggered another exodus.
Mohammad Farhad, police inspector at Teknaf on the southeast tip of Bangladesh, told AFP that one survivor from the sinking on the border between Bangladesh and Myanmar reported that the boat had about 135 passengers on board.
“The boat was heading to Malaysia illegally,” Farhad said, adding that the 24-year-old survivor was being held in custody. “He does not know what happened to the others as it was dark and he was desperate to save his own life.”
Farhad said a total of six survivors were reported to have been picked up by a fishing vessel after the refugee boat left Sabrang village in Bangladesh on Saturday.
"We have spoken to families of missing passengers," he said.
There were conflicting reports about whether all those on the boat were Rohingya and also over the time of the sinking, which Bangladesh police said occurred early Sunday.
"We learned that an overcrowded boat with 133 people on board, which was leaving for Malaysia, sank," Chris Lewa, the Bangkok-based director of The Arakan Project, a Rohingya advocacy group, said.
"Six survivors have been rescued by fishing boats. The others are missing," she told AFP.
Lewa however said her organisation had been told that the accident happened overnight Monday to Tuesday.
At least 89 people have been killed and tens of thousands have fled their homes in a new wave of communal unrest sweeping Myanmar's western Rakhine state, where violence between Rohingya and Buddhists in June left dozens dead.
Since the unrest erupted, Bangladesh has been turning away boatloads of fleeing Rohingya.
The policy has been criticised by the United Nations but Bangladesh said it was already burdened with an estimated 300,000 Rohingya.
Many Rohingya refugees now try to head to Muslim-majority Malaysia for a better life. Officials said Bangladesh coastguards had yet to find any bodies after the sinking. "We could not start a search and rescue operation as the survivor could not confirm to us the position of the accident," acting administrator of Cox's Bazaar district Jasim Uddin told AFP.
"The coastguard is on alert to watch for bodies on the shore."
Myanmar's 800,000 stateless Rohingya, described by the United Nations as among the world's most persecuted minorities, are seen by the government and many Burmese as illegal immigrants from neighbouring Bangladesh.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.nation.co.ke/News/world/130+missing+in+Rohingya+boat+sinking+say+police/-/1068/1608462/-/t003e1/-/index.html
Why dead body management in disasters matters
Dead body management is a key element of disaster response: How corpses are dealt with can have a profound impact and long-lasting effect on the mental health of survivors and communities, say experts.
“Their proper management is a core component of disaster response, together with the rescue and care of survivors and the provision of essential services,” Morris Tidball-Binz, a forensic adviser at the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Geneva, told IRIN.
Large-scale natural disasters may result in many tens of thousands of fatalities which can overwhelm local systems, and the absence of mass fatality planning can result in the mismanagement of dead bodies.
In the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, which killed more than 200,000 people, lack of coordination resulted in corpses being piled up outside morgues and hospitals, while thousands were buried unidentified in mass graves.
But there are also misconceptions about the management of dead bodies. Despite popular belief, cadavers resulting from a disaster do not spread disease.
According to the latest guidelines by the Pan American Health Organization and World Health Organization (PAHO/WHO), there is no evidence that corpses result in epidemics, as victims of natural disasters generally die from trauma, drowning or fire - not infectious diseases such as cholera, typhoid, malaria or plague.
Certain infectious diseases like tuberculosis, hepatitis B and C, and diarrhoeal diseases last for up to two days in a dead body. HIV may survive for up to six days. All these infections pose only a slight risk of contamination, say the guidelines.
“There is no existing evidence that dead bodies pose a significant public health risk for diseases outbreaks,” said Kouadio Koffi Isidore, a researcher on infectious diseases and public health risk management in disasters at the UN University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in Kuala Lumpur. “Any source of disease transmission will merely be among the affected disaster survivors,” he added.
While there is a potential risk of diarrhoea from drinking water contaminated by faecal material from dead bodies, routine disinfection of drinking water is sufficient to prevent waterborne diseases, experts say.
Nevertheless, death as a result of infectious diseases like cholera, typhus or plague may represent a health risk requiring appropriate disposal of corpses, said Isidore. “Certain precautions should be taken when disposing [of] corpses immediately after death, especially in a context of infectious diseases outbreak.”
PAHO/WHO guidelines recommend disinfection with chlorine solution, rather than lime powder which is commonly used but which has a limited effect on pathogens.
Awareness and training
There is also a need to raise awareness among communities on the risk of infection from practices such as the washing and shrouding of a dead body (an obligatory duty for Muslims), as well as large gatherings during funerals.
According to the PAHO/WHO guidelines, the empowerment and training of local communities is a major part of the management of cadavers, as local residents are typically the first to arrive to help rescue people.
The psychological aspect is also extremely important. Proper and dignified management of the dead can help ease the trauma of losing loved ones. Rapid retrieval of corpses should be a priority: It aids identification and reduces the stress on survivors. Another challenge is that the sight and smell of dead bodies can often distress survivors.
According to the Asian Disaster Preparedeness Centre (ADPC), in the aftermath of a disaster, this is key in addressing the psychological trauma of losing a loved one and witnessing death on a large scale.
“Priority should be placed on helping people recreate social networks to avoid isolation, and to give people an appropriate opportunity to mourn,” International Medical Corps child psychiatrist Lynne Jones told IRIN in an earlier interview.
Religion and customs Religious and community leaders can play a major role in helping relatives to better understand and accept the recovery and management of dead bodies, ADPC guidelines say.
Local communities should be encouraged to carry out traditional ceremonies and grieving processes and observe whatever cultural and religious events they normally practice.
“If deaths are not dignified - that is, lacking proper burials or mourning ceremonies - this denies people the means to accept and come to terms with their loss,” Jones told IRIN after the Haiti earthquake.
Body disposal
Under international best practice Sphere standards, corpses should be disposed of in a manner that is dignified, culturally appropriate, and based on good public health practices.
Rapid cremations, the use of bulldozers to gather dead bodies, or the lack of a place in which to bury a corpse, can cause a lot of stress.
Sphere standards require graveyards to be at least 30 metres from groundwater sources used for drinking water, with the bottom of any grave at least 1.5m above the groundwater table; surface water from graveyards must not enter inhabited areas.
ICRC advises that the cremation of unidentified bodies should be avoided since there are no health advantages: Burials are preferred in emergencies unless there are religious or cultural reasons for another course of action.
Moreover, cremation can destroy evidence needed for future identification, requires large amounts of fuel that can result in smoke pollution, and can cause logistical problems for recovery teams having to deal with a large number of corpses.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96673/Analysis-Post-disaster-dead-body-management
“Their proper management is a core component of disaster response, together with the rescue and care of survivors and the provision of essential services,” Morris Tidball-Binz, a forensic adviser at the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) in Geneva, told IRIN.
Large-scale natural disasters may result in many tens of thousands of fatalities which can overwhelm local systems, and the absence of mass fatality planning can result in the mismanagement of dead bodies.
In the aftermath of the 2010 earthquake in Haiti, which killed more than 200,000 people, lack of coordination resulted in corpses being piled up outside morgues and hospitals, while thousands were buried unidentified in mass graves.
But there are also misconceptions about the management of dead bodies. Despite popular belief, cadavers resulting from a disaster do not spread disease.
According to the latest guidelines by the Pan American Health Organization and World Health Organization (PAHO/WHO), there is no evidence that corpses result in epidemics, as victims of natural disasters generally die from trauma, drowning or fire - not infectious diseases such as cholera, typhoid, malaria or plague.
Certain infectious diseases like tuberculosis, hepatitis B and C, and diarrhoeal diseases last for up to two days in a dead body. HIV may survive for up to six days. All these infections pose only a slight risk of contamination, say the guidelines.
“There is no existing evidence that dead bodies pose a significant public health risk for diseases outbreaks,” said Kouadio Koffi Isidore, a researcher on infectious diseases and public health risk management in disasters at the UN University International Institute for Global Health (UNU-IIGH) in Kuala Lumpur. “Any source of disease transmission will merely be among the affected disaster survivors,” he added.
While there is a potential risk of diarrhoea from drinking water contaminated by faecal material from dead bodies, routine disinfection of drinking water is sufficient to prevent waterborne diseases, experts say.
Nevertheless, death as a result of infectious diseases like cholera, typhus or plague may represent a health risk requiring appropriate disposal of corpses, said Isidore. “Certain precautions should be taken when disposing [of] corpses immediately after death, especially in a context of infectious diseases outbreak.”
PAHO/WHO guidelines recommend disinfection with chlorine solution, rather than lime powder which is commonly used but which has a limited effect on pathogens.
Awareness and training
There is also a need to raise awareness among communities on the risk of infection from practices such as the washing and shrouding of a dead body (an obligatory duty for Muslims), as well as large gatherings during funerals.
According to the PAHO/WHO guidelines, the empowerment and training of local communities is a major part of the management of cadavers, as local residents are typically the first to arrive to help rescue people.
The psychological aspect is also extremely important. Proper and dignified management of the dead can help ease the trauma of losing loved ones. Rapid retrieval of corpses should be a priority: It aids identification and reduces the stress on survivors. Another challenge is that the sight and smell of dead bodies can often distress survivors.
According to the Asian Disaster Preparedeness Centre (ADPC), in the aftermath of a disaster, this is key in addressing the psychological trauma of losing a loved one and witnessing death on a large scale.
“Priority should be placed on helping people recreate social networks to avoid isolation, and to give people an appropriate opportunity to mourn,” International Medical Corps child psychiatrist Lynne Jones told IRIN in an earlier interview.
Religion and customs Religious and community leaders can play a major role in helping relatives to better understand and accept the recovery and management of dead bodies, ADPC guidelines say.
Local communities should be encouraged to carry out traditional ceremonies and grieving processes and observe whatever cultural and religious events they normally practice.
“If deaths are not dignified - that is, lacking proper burials or mourning ceremonies - this denies people the means to accept and come to terms with their loss,” Jones told IRIN after the Haiti earthquake.
Body disposal
Under international best practice Sphere standards, corpses should be disposed of in a manner that is dignified, culturally appropriate, and based on good public health practices.
Rapid cremations, the use of bulldozers to gather dead bodies, or the lack of a place in which to bury a corpse, can cause a lot of stress.
Sphere standards require graveyards to be at least 30 metres from groundwater sources used for drinking water, with the bottom of any grave at least 1.5m above the groundwater table; surface water from graveyards must not enter inhabited areas.
ICRC advises that the cremation of unidentified bodies should be avoided since there are no health advantages: Burials are preferred in emergencies unless there are religious or cultural reasons for another course of action.
Moreover, cremation can destroy evidence needed for future identification, requires large amounts of fuel that can result in smoke pollution, and can cause logistical problems for recovery teams having to deal with a large number of corpses.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.irinnews.org/Report/96673/Analysis-Post-disaster-dead-body-management
'Celebratory' gunfire at Saudi wedding brings down electricity cable killing 23 women and children
More than 20 women and children have died and dozens others were injured when traditional celebratory gunfire at a Saudi wedding brought down an electric cable causing a fire to break out.
A total of 23 people - believed to be mostly women - were electrocuted when bullets caused the high-voltage power line to fall on to a metal door at the wedding in eastern Saudi Arabia.
According to local news reports sparks from the cable caused an electrical fire in a women's only marquee at the wedding party in Ain Badr, near Abqaiq.
Strict rules of gender segregation in the conservative Islamic kingdom mean women are typically kept separate from men at weddings. Children at the wedding would have been with the female guests.
The tragedy at the party near Abqaiq - which left at least 30 more guests injured - occurred less than a month after Saudi Arabia banned the shooting of firearms at weddings, a popular tradition in tribal areas of the conservative Islamic kingdom.
Hundreds of people are understood to have been inside the courtyard of the home in Ain Badr when the blaze broke out.
Eastern Province official Abdullah Khashman said all those killed were from the same tribe.
A further 30 wedding guests were injured in the incident near Abqaiq, a centre of the Saudi energy industry.
'At the wedding, the cable fell on a metal door and the 23 people who died were all electrocuted,' Mr Khashman said.
Eastern Province governor Prince Mohammed bin Fahd ordered an investigation into the incident, the official Saudi Press Agency said.
Earlier this month Saudi officials introduced a zero-tolerance policy on the culturally accepted practice of shooting firearms at weddings and other special occasions, following previous accidental deaths.
Interior Minister Prince Ahmad Bin Abdul Aziz assigned police to monitor palaces, wedding halls and relaxation areas to ensure full compliance with the law, the Saudi Press Agency reported at the time.
The announcement was made following an increase in fatal and serious injuries as a result of celebratory gunfire, the agency said.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225691/Celebratory-gunfire-Saudi-wedding-brings-electricity-cable-killing-23-women-children.html#ixzz2Asx3h0Tc Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
A total of 23 people - believed to be mostly women - were electrocuted when bullets caused the high-voltage power line to fall on to a metal door at the wedding in eastern Saudi Arabia.
According to local news reports sparks from the cable caused an electrical fire in a women's only marquee at the wedding party in Ain Badr, near Abqaiq.
Strict rules of gender segregation in the conservative Islamic kingdom mean women are typically kept separate from men at weddings. Children at the wedding would have been with the female guests.
The tragedy at the party near Abqaiq - which left at least 30 more guests injured - occurred less than a month after Saudi Arabia banned the shooting of firearms at weddings, a popular tradition in tribal areas of the conservative Islamic kingdom.
Hundreds of people are understood to have been inside the courtyard of the home in Ain Badr when the blaze broke out.
Eastern Province official Abdullah Khashman said all those killed were from the same tribe.
A further 30 wedding guests were injured in the incident near Abqaiq, a centre of the Saudi energy industry.
'At the wedding, the cable fell on a metal door and the 23 people who died were all electrocuted,' Mr Khashman said.
Eastern Province governor Prince Mohammed bin Fahd ordered an investigation into the incident, the official Saudi Press Agency said.
Earlier this month Saudi officials introduced a zero-tolerance policy on the culturally accepted practice of shooting firearms at weddings and other special occasions, following previous accidental deaths.
Interior Minister Prince Ahmad Bin Abdul Aziz assigned police to monitor palaces, wedding halls and relaxation areas to ensure full compliance with the law, the Saudi Press Agency reported at the time.
The announcement was made following an increase in fatal and serious injuries as a result of celebratory gunfire, the agency said.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225691/Celebratory-gunfire-Saudi-wedding-brings-electricity-cable-killing-23-women-children.html#ixzz2Asx3h0Tc Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Prosecutor confirms second burial mix-up of Smolensk victims
Military prosecutors have confirmed that the last president of Poland's Cold War-era government-in-exile was laid to rest at the wrong site following the 2010 Smolensk air disaster.
According to Ireneusz Szelag, Chief Warsaw Military Prosecutor, the mistake occurred due to incorrect identifications made in Russia following the April 2010 plane crash.
President Ryszard Kaczorowski's family did not take part in that initial identification process.
A second male victim, whose name has not been disclosed to the media owing to the family's wishes, was mistakenly entombed at Warsaw's national pantheon, the Temple of Divine Providence, in place of the late president.
“DNA tests have led to the conclusion that due to misidentification, the bodies were buried in the wrong graves,” Szelag said at a press conference on Tuesday.
“The bodies were not changed,” he claimed.
Szelag noted that the families have already been informed of the mistake.
The exhumations took place on Monday 22 October.
They follow the confirmation last month that two other crash victims, including the late Solidarity activist Anna Walentynowicz, were also buried in the wrong graves.
Seven victims of the April 2010 crash have now been exhumed, and it has been confirmed that two more exhumations are due to occur this year
President Kaczorowski was the last leader of the Polish government-in-exile in London, which remained in Britain following World War II owing to the installation of a communist regime in Poland.
Tthe presidential insignia was finally returned to Poland in December 1990 by Kaczorowski himself, following the collapse of the Iron Curtain.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.thenews.pl/1/9/Artykul/116948,Prosecutor-confirms-second-burial-mixup-of-Smolensk-victims
According to Ireneusz Szelag, Chief Warsaw Military Prosecutor, the mistake occurred due to incorrect identifications made in Russia following the April 2010 plane crash.
President Ryszard Kaczorowski's family did not take part in that initial identification process.
A second male victim, whose name has not been disclosed to the media owing to the family's wishes, was mistakenly entombed at Warsaw's national pantheon, the Temple of Divine Providence, in place of the late president.
“DNA tests have led to the conclusion that due to misidentification, the bodies were buried in the wrong graves,” Szelag said at a press conference on Tuesday.
“The bodies were not changed,” he claimed.
Szelag noted that the families have already been informed of the mistake.
The exhumations took place on Monday 22 October.
They follow the confirmation last month that two other crash victims, including the late Solidarity activist Anna Walentynowicz, were also buried in the wrong graves.
Seven victims of the April 2010 crash have now been exhumed, and it has been confirmed that two more exhumations are due to occur this year
President Kaczorowski was the last leader of the Polish government-in-exile in London, which remained in Britain following World War II owing to the installation of a communist regime in Poland.
Tthe presidential insignia was finally returned to Poland in December 1990 by Kaczorowski himself, following the collapse of the Iron Curtain.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.thenews.pl/1/9/Artykul/116948,Prosecutor-confirms-second-burial-mixup-of-Smolensk-victims
Two Baldia fire victims identified
Two more victims of the Baldia factory incident were identified on Tuesday. DNA tests confirmed the identities of Rafaqat Liaquat, a resident of Ittehad Town, and Shahbaz Mohammad, a resident of Baldia Town.
Both men worked in the stitching room of the ill-fated Ali Enterprises factory. Investigations have confirmed that the highest number of deaths took place in that room. The bodies, which were at the Edhi morgue, were handed over to the families of the victims. An Edhi official said that around 29 more unidentified bodies remain at the morgue.
DNA reports for around 28 unidentified victims are still pending
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://tribune.com.pk/story/458515/baldia-fire-tribunal-report-ready-to-be-made-public-once-cm-decides/
Both men worked in the stitching room of the ill-fated Ali Enterprises factory. Investigations have confirmed that the highest number of deaths took place in that room. The bodies, which were at the Edhi morgue, were handed over to the families of the victims. An Edhi official said that around 29 more unidentified bodies remain at the morgue.
DNA reports for around 28 unidentified victims are still pending
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://tribune.com.pk/story/458515/baldia-fire-tribunal-report-ready-to-be-made-public-once-cm-decides/
Bahawalpur road accident leaves 26 dead
BAHAWALPUR - A passenger van crashed into a pick-up truck at a busy highway intersection near Bahawalpur on Tuesday, leaving 26 people, including women and children, dead.
Sohail Tajik, Bahawalpur district police officer, told the media that the accident took place when a passenger van collided with an oncoming truck on highway near Bahawalpur, a private television channel reported.
Highway Patrolling Police Inspector Amir Sahazad said that the wagon, coming from Mubarikpur, was moving on the Bahawalpur bypass when it slammed into the truck, which was going on the bypass, as both did not slow down on the turn.
He said that the wagon driver died on the spot and the truck driver and two more people on the truck got critically injured. The Rescue 1122 rescuers cut the truck body to pull the men out of the truck and shifted them to the Bahawal Victoria Hospital in Bahawalpur.
An eyewitness said that both the drivers were driving so fast that they could not stop their vehicles.
The local Rescue 1122 chief Dr Asif Rahim Channer said: “We received a call at 11:40 am about the accident by police and we send the six ambulances to the sight of the accident. The rescuers found 20 dead bodies at the spot, while 7 critically injured and 3 people with minor injuries who were shifted to the Bahawal Victoria Hospital. One injured woman died on her to the hospital.”
He told the media that the rescue operation continued for 90 minutes in which six ambulances and 30 rescuers took part.
The doctor, in charge of the Emergency Unit of Bahawal Victoria Hospital, said that doctors were doing their best to save the life of the injured people.
The Bahawalpur DPO said that 14 bodies were identified and the process was underway to hand over the bodies to their relatives.
He also confirmed that at least seven women and four children were among the dead.
Pakistan has a high rate of fatal traffic accidents, most of which are blamed on reckless driving, poorly maintained vehicles and bad road conditions.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/national/31-Oct-2012/bahawalpur-road-accident-leaves-26-dead
Sohail Tajik, Bahawalpur district police officer, told the media that the accident took place when a passenger van collided with an oncoming truck on highway near Bahawalpur, a private television channel reported.
Highway Patrolling Police Inspector Amir Sahazad said that the wagon, coming from Mubarikpur, was moving on the Bahawalpur bypass when it slammed into the truck, which was going on the bypass, as both did not slow down on the turn.
He said that the wagon driver died on the spot and the truck driver and two more people on the truck got critically injured. The Rescue 1122 rescuers cut the truck body to pull the men out of the truck and shifted them to the Bahawal Victoria Hospital in Bahawalpur.
An eyewitness said that both the drivers were driving so fast that they could not stop their vehicles.
The local Rescue 1122 chief Dr Asif Rahim Channer said: “We received a call at 11:40 am about the accident by police and we send the six ambulances to the sight of the accident. The rescuers found 20 dead bodies at the spot, while 7 critically injured and 3 people with minor injuries who were shifted to the Bahawal Victoria Hospital. One injured woman died on her to the hospital.”
He told the media that the rescue operation continued for 90 minutes in which six ambulances and 30 rescuers took part.
The doctor, in charge of the Emergency Unit of Bahawal Victoria Hospital, said that doctors were doing their best to save the life of the injured people.
The Bahawalpur DPO said that 14 bodies were identified and the process was underway to hand over the bodies to their relatives.
He also confirmed that at least seven women and four children were among the dead.
Pakistan has a high rate of fatal traffic accidents, most of which are blamed on reckless driving, poorly maintained vehicles and bad road conditions.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.nation.com.pk/pakistan-news-newspaper-daily-english-online/national/31-Oct-2012/bahawalpur-road-accident-leaves-26-dead
Hurricane Sandy kills at least 18 in New York
At least 18 New Yorkers were killed during superstorm Sandy -- including an off-duty cop who drowned in his basement while rescuing his family.
And the toll could still rise: two little boys, ages 2 and 4, were listed as missing nearly 24 hours after they got separated from their mother after her car was submerged on Father Capodanno Blvd. on Staten Island.
Across the city, fallen trees, downed power lines and flooded streets were a deadly combination for people in and out of the evacuation zone.
-- The off-duty officer, whose name was not released, got his father, girlfriend and baby to the attic of their Dorty Ave. home on the southern end of Staten Island.
He then went downstairs and never returned. Fellow officers found him in the basement about 5 a.m. Tuesday.
"Somehow he got trapped in his basement and he drowned in the basement,” Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said.
The name of the cop, who was assigned to the 1st Precinct in Lower Manhattan, was not immediately released.
-- In Richmond Hill, Queens, a 23-year-old woman taking cellphone photos of a power line that had caught fire suffered a horrific death after she stepped on a live wire on the sidewalk and fell to the ground, screaming.
"She was right on top of the live cables and they were just frying her," said neighbor Renny Bhagretta, 44, who watched from his window on 134th St. Monday night. "She couldn't move. She didn't have a chance."
Police, firefighters and Con Edison workers couldn’t get near the victim for almost two hours because cables strewn all over the road were still sparking.
"Her body was burning," said neighbor Asha Bhagaretti, 43. "It was just horrifying."
-- In Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, a teacher and a grad student were crushed by giant trees that came crashing down on the street of stately Victorian homes at the height of the storm on Monday night.
The bodies of Jessie Streich-Kest, 25, and longtime pal Jacob Vogelman, 24, were discovered the next morning on Ditmas Ave. and E. 19th St.
Streich-Kest had called her parents -- her father is labor activist Jon Kest -- just before going out to walk her beloved pitbull-mix Max, who was rescued from a shelter a year ago.
"Her mom had said, 'Don't go out,'" said family friend Susannah Laskaris.
But Streich-Kest, who taught at the Bushwick School for Social Justice, wouldn't skimp on Max's care. "She loved the dog greatly," said a neighbor.
"She was actually a very cautious person. All I can think is the winds seemed like they were dying down."
Vogelman heart-broken mother said the Brooklyn College theater design student went to Streich-Kest’s house to keep her company during the storm.
"He was an incredible son," said Marcia Sikowitz, 60, who lived with her son in Park Slope. "He had an old soul and he was always helping people."
-- At 92 Laight Street in Tribeca, a middle-aged parking garage worker was killed when he got trapped in the basement by flash flooding.
Good Samaritan Kevin Gouche, 53, said he and a neighbor saw water pouring into the garage and two attendants stuck inside.
"The water was raging like a river. We told them to get out. I couldn't understand why they were still messing around down there,” Gouche said.
One of the men apparently escaped while the second stayed behind. Thirty minutes later, the water in the garage had gone from knee-level to ceiling height.
Cops told Gouche the victim was found in a vehicle when rescuers were able to get to him about 9:30 am Tuesday.
-- The body of a 55-year-old man was found in an empty retail space at 90 Broad St. in lower Manhattan on Tuesday morning. Police said it appears he was carried into the building by a four-foot-deep river of water that smashed the glass front of the building.
-- A 13-year-old girl was found dead under a pile of debris in the Tottenville section of Staten Island where four beachfront homes were washed away. Her mother, a church worker, was critically injured and her father, a plumber, was missing, neighbors said.
“They wanted to stay. We tried to convince them to leave. They said they didn’t think it would be that bad,” said John Alleva, 47, who live near the family on Yetman Ave.
-- In Flushing, Queens, a tree crashed into a house at 47-36 166th St. and killed St. John’s University grad student Anthony Laino.
“He was in his bedroom on his couch,” said Heather Valente, mother of Laino’s fiancee. “How do you deal with such a cataclysmic happening?...How do you explain something this horrible? You can’t.”
An off-duty cop and an off-duty firefighter ran into the house but couldn’t save Laino, whose body was discovered by one of his two older brothers.
“They had been begging the city to take down this tree,” neighbor Joann Evangelista said. “It was a sick tree.”
-- A 75-year-old Manhattan woman died after her oxygen machine lost power. Herminia St. John’s grandson ran to nearby Bellevue Hospital for a manually operated oxygen tank -- and paramedics rushed back to the apartment at 444 Second Ave. But St. John had already gone into cardiac arrest and died.
-- Cops asked to check on a family on Fox Beach Ave. on Staten Island discovered a 51-year-old man and his 20-year-old son in the basement of their badly damaged home, buried under debris.
-- Police discovered a 70-year-old woman floating in water inside a home at 164-25 98th St. in Queens about 1 a.m. Tuesday morning after her family couldn’t reach her.
-- Two deaths were reported on Long Island. John Miller, 39, a father of two was killed while standing near his car outside his Lloyd Harbor home, waiting to evacuate, police said. Safar Shafinoori, 84, of Roslyn was killed by a falling tree. A Garden City man blew off his hand when he lit a firework that he mistook for a candle.
-- At least three people were killed in northern New Jersey: a man and a woman whose pickup truck was hit by a tree in Mendham Township and a 77-year-old man whose home was struck by a tree.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/sandy-kills-18-new-yorkers-article-1.1194971#ixzz2AsU7aPT5
And the toll could still rise: two little boys, ages 2 and 4, were listed as missing nearly 24 hours after they got separated from their mother after her car was submerged on Father Capodanno Blvd. on Staten Island.
Across the city, fallen trees, downed power lines and flooded streets were a deadly combination for people in and out of the evacuation zone.
-- The off-duty officer, whose name was not released, got his father, girlfriend and baby to the attic of their Dorty Ave. home on the southern end of Staten Island.
He then went downstairs and never returned. Fellow officers found him in the basement about 5 a.m. Tuesday.
"Somehow he got trapped in his basement and he drowned in the basement,” Police Commissioner Raymond Kelly said.
The name of the cop, who was assigned to the 1st Precinct in Lower Manhattan, was not immediately released.
-- In Richmond Hill, Queens, a 23-year-old woman taking cellphone photos of a power line that had caught fire suffered a horrific death after she stepped on a live wire on the sidewalk and fell to the ground, screaming.
"She was right on top of the live cables and they were just frying her," said neighbor Renny Bhagretta, 44, who watched from his window on 134th St. Monday night. "She couldn't move. She didn't have a chance."
Police, firefighters and Con Edison workers couldn’t get near the victim for almost two hours because cables strewn all over the road were still sparking.
"Her body was burning," said neighbor Asha Bhagaretti, 43. "It was just horrifying."
-- In Ditmas Park, Brooklyn, a teacher and a grad student were crushed by giant trees that came crashing down on the street of stately Victorian homes at the height of the storm on Monday night.
The bodies of Jessie Streich-Kest, 25, and longtime pal Jacob Vogelman, 24, were discovered the next morning on Ditmas Ave. and E. 19th St.
Streich-Kest had called her parents -- her father is labor activist Jon Kest -- just before going out to walk her beloved pitbull-mix Max, who was rescued from a shelter a year ago.
"Her mom had said, 'Don't go out,'" said family friend Susannah Laskaris.
But Streich-Kest, who taught at the Bushwick School for Social Justice, wouldn't skimp on Max's care. "She loved the dog greatly," said a neighbor.
"She was actually a very cautious person. All I can think is the winds seemed like they were dying down."
Vogelman heart-broken mother said the Brooklyn College theater design student went to Streich-Kest’s house to keep her company during the storm.
"He was an incredible son," said Marcia Sikowitz, 60, who lived with her son in Park Slope. "He had an old soul and he was always helping people."
-- At 92 Laight Street in Tribeca, a middle-aged parking garage worker was killed when he got trapped in the basement by flash flooding.
Good Samaritan Kevin Gouche, 53, said he and a neighbor saw water pouring into the garage and two attendants stuck inside.
"The water was raging like a river. We told them to get out. I couldn't understand why they were still messing around down there,” Gouche said.
One of the men apparently escaped while the second stayed behind. Thirty minutes later, the water in the garage had gone from knee-level to ceiling height.
Cops told Gouche the victim was found in a vehicle when rescuers were able to get to him about 9:30 am Tuesday.
-- The body of a 55-year-old man was found in an empty retail space at 90 Broad St. in lower Manhattan on Tuesday morning. Police said it appears he was carried into the building by a four-foot-deep river of water that smashed the glass front of the building.
-- A 13-year-old girl was found dead under a pile of debris in the Tottenville section of Staten Island where four beachfront homes were washed away. Her mother, a church worker, was critically injured and her father, a plumber, was missing, neighbors said.
“They wanted to stay. We tried to convince them to leave. They said they didn’t think it would be that bad,” said John Alleva, 47, who live near the family on Yetman Ave.
-- In Flushing, Queens, a tree crashed into a house at 47-36 166th St. and killed St. John’s University grad student Anthony Laino.
“He was in his bedroom on his couch,” said Heather Valente, mother of Laino’s fiancee. “How do you deal with such a cataclysmic happening?...How do you explain something this horrible? You can’t.”
An off-duty cop and an off-duty firefighter ran into the house but couldn’t save Laino, whose body was discovered by one of his two older brothers.
“They had been begging the city to take down this tree,” neighbor Joann Evangelista said. “It was a sick tree.”
-- A 75-year-old Manhattan woman died after her oxygen machine lost power. Herminia St. John’s grandson ran to nearby Bellevue Hospital for a manually operated oxygen tank -- and paramedics rushed back to the apartment at 444 Second Ave. But St. John had already gone into cardiac arrest and died.
-- Cops asked to check on a family on Fox Beach Ave. on Staten Island discovered a 51-year-old man and his 20-year-old son in the basement of their badly damaged home, buried under debris.
-- Police discovered a 70-year-old woman floating in water inside a home at 164-25 98th St. in Queens about 1 a.m. Tuesday morning after her family couldn’t reach her.
-- Two deaths were reported on Long Island. John Miller, 39, a father of two was killed while standing near his car outside his Lloyd Harbor home, waiting to evacuate, police said. Safar Shafinoori, 84, of Roslyn was killed by a falling tree. A Garden City man blew off his hand when he lit a firework that he mistook for a candle.
-- At least three people were killed in northern New Jersey: a man and a woman whose pickup truck was hit by a tree in Mendham Township and a 77-year-old man whose home was struck by a tree.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Read more: http://www.nydailynews.com/new-york/sandy-kills-18-new-yorkers-article-1.1194971#ixzz2AsU7aPT5
Lagos Boat Mishap: Missing Bodies Recovered
Hours of thorough search of the Imude community lagoon, Otto-Awori Local Council Development Area, LCDA, Lagos, has paid off as the remaining three bodies out of the 10 that drowned in a boat mishap on Sunday, were finally recovered yesterday by the community search and recovery team.
According to reports, one of the three missing bodies was recovered from the lagoon by the team at about 7:00 p.m. on Monday night while the two other bodies were recovered from the lagoon on Tuesday.
Five bodies had been recovered immediately after the incident occurred last Sunday. And on Monday, two other bodies were recovered.
Baale of Imude community, Oto-Awori Local Council Development Area, (LCDA) Chief Ajayi Ashade while confirming the recovery said that the ten bodies have been recovered from the lagoon, adding “the last two were recovered from the lagoon at the early hours of today (yesterday).”
Speaking on the recovery, the leader of the community search and recovery team, Apostle Kehinde Akerele said that they commenced their exercise as early as 6:00 a.m., which has been their practice since the ugly incident occurred in the community.
Akerele emphasized that the search and recovery of the three remaining bodies was done by his team late on Monday and at the early hours of Tuesday. He however commended the Commissioner for Rural Development, Mr. Cornelius Ojelabi for releasing the fund to secure the services of a speed boat which he said made the search easier.
Baale of Imude community after the recovery of the bodies said yesterday that the community would commence rituals to cleanse the community and to appeal to the gods of the land in order not to experience such an incident again.
“The rituals will take place at the river bank. Within the nine days of the rites, there will not be restriction of movement within the community,” Ashade said.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.informationnigeria.org/2012/10/lagos-boat-mishap-missing-bodies-recovered.html
According to reports, one of the three missing bodies was recovered from the lagoon by the team at about 7:00 p.m. on Monday night while the two other bodies were recovered from the lagoon on Tuesday.
Five bodies had been recovered immediately after the incident occurred last Sunday. And on Monday, two other bodies were recovered.
Baale of Imude community, Oto-Awori Local Council Development Area, (LCDA) Chief Ajayi Ashade while confirming the recovery said that the ten bodies have been recovered from the lagoon, adding “the last two were recovered from the lagoon at the early hours of today (yesterday).”
Speaking on the recovery, the leader of the community search and recovery team, Apostle Kehinde Akerele said that they commenced their exercise as early as 6:00 a.m., which has been their practice since the ugly incident occurred in the community.
Akerele emphasized that the search and recovery of the three remaining bodies was done by his team late on Monday and at the early hours of Tuesday. He however commended the Commissioner for Rural Development, Mr. Cornelius Ojelabi for releasing the fund to secure the services of a speed boat which he said made the search easier.
Baale of Imude community after the recovery of the bodies said yesterday that the community would commence rituals to cleanse the community and to appeal to the gods of the land in order not to experience such an incident again.
“The rituals will take place at the river bank. Within the nine days of the rites, there will not be restriction of movement within the community,” Ashade said.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.informationnigeria.org/2012/10/lagos-boat-mishap-missing-bodies-recovered.html
Hurricane Sandy knocks down tree, turns up skeleton
NEW HAVEN, Conn. — In addition to being one of the more devastating storms ever to hit the east coast, Hurricane Sandy can now be counted as a gravedigger.
The storm knocked a tree down in New Haven, and inside was a human skeleton, according to TV station WTNH.
"I noticed what I thought was a rock at first, I kind of poked it and a piece came off in my hand, and I noticed it was bone fragments," said Katie Carbo, according to WTNH. "So I took a stick and knocked some of the dirt away and noticed it was an entire skull and body and vertebrae, ribs."
Carbo found human remains under that tree.
The area used to be a cemetery.
All of the headstones were moved, but the bodies were not.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/10/hurricane_sandy_knocks_down_tr.html
The storm knocked a tree down in New Haven, and inside was a human skeleton, according to TV station WTNH.
"I noticed what I thought was a rock at first, I kind of poked it and a piece came off in my hand, and I noticed it was bone fragments," said Katie Carbo, according to WTNH. "So I took a stick and knocked some of the dirt away and noticed it was an entire skull and body and vertebrae, ribs."
Carbo found human remains under that tree.
The area used to be a cemetery.
All of the headstones were moved, but the bodies were not.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
http://www.nj.com/news/index.ssf/2012/10/hurricane_sandy_knocks_down_tr.html
Hurricane Sandy forces coffins of the dead to rise up from the ground
After having leveled huge swathes of New York City and the East Coast as it rampaged through the region on Monday night, superstorm Sandy inflicted a final indignity as it caused coffins to rise from their graves.
At one cemetery in Crisfield, Maryland, two caskets, one silver and the other bronze, rose up from the ground as the sheer force of the water unleashed by Sandy swelled the ground.
Powerful enough to dislodge the cement slabs that covered the graves, the sad sight indicated the indiscriminate bombardment that mother nature brought to reign over the U.S. Atlantic coastline.
The most devastating storm in decades to hit the country's most densely populated region upended man and nature as it rolled back the clock on 21st-century lives, cutting off modern communication and leaving millions without power as thousands who fled their water-damaged homes wondered when, and if, life would return to normal.
Superstorm Sandy killed at least 50 people, many hit by falling trees, and still wasn't finished. It inched inland across Pennsylvania, ready to bank toward western New York to dump more of its water and likely cause more havoc last night.
Behind it: a dazed, inundated New York City, a waterlogged Atlantic Coast and a moonscape of disarray and debris - from unmoored shore-town boardwalks to submerged mass-transit systems to delicate presidential politics.
'Nature,' said New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, assessing the damage to his city, 'is an awful lot more powerful than we are.'
More than 8.2million households were without power in 17 states as far west as Michigan.
Nearly two million of those were in New York, where large swaths of lower Manhattan lost electricity and entire streets ended up underwater - as did seven subway tunnels between Manhattan and Brooklyn at one point.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225611/Hurricane-Sandy-2012-Superstorm-forces-coffins-dead-rise-ground.html#ixzz2AsOMmIk9 Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
At one cemetery in Crisfield, Maryland, two caskets, one silver and the other bronze, rose up from the ground as the sheer force of the water unleashed by Sandy swelled the ground.
Powerful enough to dislodge the cement slabs that covered the graves, the sad sight indicated the indiscriminate bombardment that mother nature brought to reign over the U.S. Atlantic coastline.
The most devastating storm in decades to hit the country's most densely populated region upended man and nature as it rolled back the clock on 21st-century lives, cutting off modern communication and leaving millions without power as thousands who fled their water-damaged homes wondered when, and if, life would return to normal.
Superstorm Sandy killed at least 50 people, many hit by falling trees, and still wasn't finished. It inched inland across Pennsylvania, ready to bank toward western New York to dump more of its water and likely cause more havoc last night.
Behind it: a dazed, inundated New York City, a waterlogged Atlantic Coast and a moonscape of disarray and debris - from unmoored shore-town boardwalks to submerged mass-transit systems to delicate presidential politics.
'Nature,' said New York City Mayor Michael Bloomberg, assessing the damage to his city, 'is an awful lot more powerful than we are.'
More than 8.2million households were without power in 17 states as far west as Michigan.
Nearly two million of those were in New York, where large swaths of lower Manhattan lost electricity and entire streets ended up underwater - as did seven subway tunnels between Manhattan and Brooklyn at one point.
Wednesday 31 October 2012
Read more: http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2225611/Hurricane-Sandy-2012-Superstorm-forces-coffins-dead-rise-ground.html#ixzz2AsOMmIk9 Follow us: @MailOnline on Twitter | DailyMail on Facebook
Tuesday, 30 October 2012
Searching for Mexico's drug war 'disappeared'
With thousands of people missing after six years of murderous violence linked to Mexico's drugs cartels, families say they want more done to find their loved ones.
It was a warm night in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez and heavily armed troops were patrolling the streets, at the height of the war on drug cartels here.
Victor Baca, 21, had just dropped his girlfriend at her home and was buying a hot dog with two friends at a fast food stand.
Suddenly, and apparently without reason, troops approached the three young men, arrested them and drove them away.
That was three years ago - and the last time Mr Baca's family ever saw him.
"We think that part of the reason the military gave him a hard time was because he wasn't identified," says his father Gerardo Baca, explaining that his son may have forgotten his ID before going out that night.
"We didn't know they were arrested until the next day, when one of his arrested friends was sent to the state police," he added.
"We have no idea of the whereabouts of my son."
The fate of Victor Baca is one that is shared by many people in Mexico, where fighting between rival drug cartels and the military crackdown in response has seen an estimated 60,000 people killed in six years.
According to figures released earlier this year by Mexico's National Human Rights Commission, 16,000 bodies remain unidentified and a total of 24,000 people are missing
At the top of a hill in the city, beyond the rows of graves covered in floral tributes, lies an area of wasteland that has to be disturbed regularly by gravediggers.
"Yesterday the morgue sent 12 bodies to us as they were not identified," says Luis Aredondo who runs the cemetery.
"They send us 10 to 12 bodies every three months and then they are buried here, in an area of 2,000 sq m."
These are the unknown victims of Mexico's drug wars - people who'll get no funeral, have no gravestone and who will, after a year, be buried in a mass grave. At this site alone the bodies of 600 unidentified people are buried.
For one observer of the crimes carried out in the fight for lucrative drug supply routes into the US, the numbers of those missing may be an underestimate.
Professor Monica Serrano from the Colegio de Mexico, a university in Mexico City, says the cartels' use of threats and extortion to boost funds is forcing people to leave their homes and in many cases make themselves "disappear".
"In (the state of) Guerrero what we've seen is partly these movements which are the direct results of threats," she explains, adding that some figures suggest up to 400,000 people across the country may have been forced to uproot in this way.
"This is not yet being documented - we are just coming to terms with what is likely to become a major feature of the current violence."
It is difficult to determine the full extent of people going missing because of corruption among police officers and troops, according human rights observers and families of those missing.
Mexico's ambassador to the UK acknowledges the problem but says the government has invested in "institution building" and is boosting the numbers of police. Graves in the cemetery in Acapulco Graves in the cemetery in Acapulco. 24,000 people remain missing in Mexico
"We are looking at this in a very serious manner," says Eduardo Medina Mora Icaza.
"We have to build up the capabilities of the police to investigate and the justice system to process (the criminals).
He admits that corruption "is a problem, wherever you find it" but says the government has been building up larger federal and state police forces.
"Of course every single case is important and every single case shall be treated as important," he says.
"You have to build up the capabilities to deal with that."
For the parents of Victor Baca there is still hope that their son will return - and they have a simple motive to keep urging the authorities to deal with their case, despite the risks.
"It is love," says Gerardo Baca, "love of father and love of mother for our son."
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-20070488
It was a warm night in the Mexican border city of Ciudad Juarez and heavily armed troops were patrolling the streets, at the height of the war on drug cartels here.
Victor Baca, 21, had just dropped his girlfriend at her home and was buying a hot dog with two friends at a fast food stand.
Suddenly, and apparently without reason, troops approached the three young men, arrested them and drove them away.
That was three years ago - and the last time Mr Baca's family ever saw him.
"We think that part of the reason the military gave him a hard time was because he wasn't identified," says his father Gerardo Baca, explaining that his son may have forgotten his ID before going out that night.
"We didn't know they were arrested until the next day, when one of his arrested friends was sent to the state police," he added.
"We have no idea of the whereabouts of my son."
The fate of Victor Baca is one that is shared by many people in Mexico, where fighting between rival drug cartels and the military crackdown in response has seen an estimated 60,000 people killed in six years.
According to figures released earlier this year by Mexico's National Human Rights Commission, 16,000 bodies remain unidentified and a total of 24,000 people are missing
At the top of a hill in the city, beyond the rows of graves covered in floral tributes, lies an area of wasteland that has to be disturbed regularly by gravediggers.
"Yesterday the morgue sent 12 bodies to us as they were not identified," says Luis Aredondo who runs the cemetery.
"They send us 10 to 12 bodies every three months and then they are buried here, in an area of 2,000 sq m."
These are the unknown victims of Mexico's drug wars - people who'll get no funeral, have no gravestone and who will, after a year, be buried in a mass grave. At this site alone the bodies of 600 unidentified people are buried.
For one observer of the crimes carried out in the fight for lucrative drug supply routes into the US, the numbers of those missing may be an underestimate.
Professor Monica Serrano from the Colegio de Mexico, a university in Mexico City, says the cartels' use of threats and extortion to boost funds is forcing people to leave their homes and in many cases make themselves "disappear".
"In (the state of) Guerrero what we've seen is partly these movements which are the direct results of threats," she explains, adding that some figures suggest up to 400,000 people across the country may have been forced to uproot in this way.
"This is not yet being documented - we are just coming to terms with what is likely to become a major feature of the current violence."
It is difficult to determine the full extent of people going missing because of corruption among police officers and troops, according human rights observers and families of those missing.
Mexico's ambassador to the UK acknowledges the problem but says the government has invested in "institution building" and is boosting the numbers of police. Graves in the cemetery in Acapulco Graves in the cemetery in Acapulco. 24,000 people remain missing in Mexico
"We are looking at this in a very serious manner," says Eduardo Medina Mora Icaza.
"We have to build up the capabilities of the police to investigate and the justice system to process (the criminals).
He admits that corruption "is a problem, wherever you find it" but says the government has been building up larger federal and state police forces.
"Of course every single case is important and every single case shall be treated as important," he says.
"You have to build up the capabilities to deal with that."
For the parents of Victor Baca there is still hope that their son will return - and they have a simple motive to keep urging the authorities to deal with their case, despite the risks.
"It is love," says Gerardo Baca, "love of father and love of mother for our son."
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://www.bbc.co.uk/news/world-latin-america-20070488
CTV rescuers haunted by experience, inquest told
The first police officer at the scene of the CTV building collapse says rescuers will always wonder whether they could have done more to save those trapped under rubble.
Coroner Gordon Matenga is investigating the deaths of people in the central Christchurch building as a result of the February 2011 earthquake, focusing on eight people who initially survived the collapse but later died when rescuers could not reach them.
Sergeant Michael Brooklands told the hearing on Tuesday that rescuers will always be haunted by the experience but believes they did all they could, given the circumstances.
Mr Brooklands said many of those who were first to help did not consider their own safety.
He said when more search and rescue teams arrived the recovery slowed down because it was more safety conscious.
However, another witness, Detective Sergeant Rex Barnett, told the hearing that the officer in charge of the Urban Search and Rescue Team was too concerned with rescuers' safety and efforts were hampered.
Sergeant Michael Brooklands related how the Fire Service was told to stop trying to put out a blaze in the building for fear of drowning trapped survivors.
Mr Brooklands said dealing with the large fire in the remains of the CTV building after the quake was a catch-22, as drenching the blaze risked drowning people, yet leaving it increased the likelihood of burns or smoke inhalation.
He said he had to ask fire fighters several times to put out one part of the fire where he believed that someone was trapped.
Mr Brooklands recounted pulling bodies out of the rubble that had been affected by the fire, but was not sure whether it was the blaze that killed them.
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/canterbury-earthquake/119500/ctv-rescuers-haunted-by-experience,-inquest-told
Coroner Gordon Matenga is investigating the deaths of people in the central Christchurch building as a result of the February 2011 earthquake, focusing on eight people who initially survived the collapse but later died when rescuers could not reach them.
Sergeant Michael Brooklands told the hearing on Tuesday that rescuers will always be haunted by the experience but believes they did all they could, given the circumstances.
Mr Brooklands said many of those who were first to help did not consider their own safety.
He said when more search and rescue teams arrived the recovery slowed down because it was more safety conscious.
However, another witness, Detective Sergeant Rex Barnett, told the hearing that the officer in charge of the Urban Search and Rescue Team was too concerned with rescuers' safety and efforts were hampered.
Sergeant Michael Brooklands related how the Fire Service was told to stop trying to put out a blaze in the building for fear of drowning trapped survivors.
Mr Brooklands said dealing with the large fire in the remains of the CTV building after the quake was a catch-22, as drenching the blaze risked drowning people, yet leaving it increased the likelihood of burns or smoke inhalation.
He said he had to ask fire fighters several times to put out one part of the fire where he believed that someone was trapped.
Mr Brooklands recounted pulling bodies out of the rubble that had been affected by the fire, but was not sure whether it was the blaze that killed them.
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://www.radionz.co.nz/news/canterbury-earthquake/119500/ctv-rescuers-haunted-by-experience,-inquest-told
Death toll in Rivers’ floods rises to 30
The death toll of flood victims camped in various parts of Ahoada East Local Government Area of Rivers State has increased to over 30. Among the dead were two new born babies. The sad news of flood victims, dying in their camps, hit the airwave when some of the ward councillors in charge of such camps raised the alarm that inmates were dying due to poor sanitary conditions of the camps. But the increase in the death toll was given by the traditional ruler of Ahoada, Eze P. C. Ihua Maduenyi, the Eze Ahoada III.
He spoke with Daily Sun in his palace in Ahoada. “Over 30 deaths in less than three weeks, the average of 10 persons in just one week is, indeed, very alarming. This high rate of death is most disturbing,’’ he said in an emotion-laden voice. According to him, no day passes without recording, at least, two deaths. He said the alleged failure by the state government to recognise most of the camps compounded the problem.
Investigation by Daily Sun showed that two inmates, a man and a woman, had earlier died at Community Secondary School, Edeoha camp, while in UBE camp in Ahoada, Town, Mr. Goodluck Agi, said to be a native of Ihuike town, died on October 25. The councillor, representing the ward, Marvin, confirmed this, saying the late Agi started vomiting on October 24 and was rushed to the General Hospital where he died.
The Ahoada monarch said a man died at Odiemenyi the same day while two men gave up the ghost the following day, one at Alakpata, another at Odiokwo. He also disclosed how a woman was delivered of triplets and two died as a result of lack of medical care.
The lady was among the displaced persons camped at the General Hospital, one of the camps the government allegedly refused to recognise. “As a result, the woman and her new babies were denied medical care in the hospital where she gave birth,” he claimed.
As if to confirm what the traditional ruler said earlier, there was a report last Friday afternoon that another child, a year-old, just died at the General Hospital camp. The reporter, who had been at Ahoada for the past three days, monitoring the situation, rushed to the camp and the inmates confirmed the sad news, alleging that the hospital refused to treat the child since it was not a recognised camp.
They gave the name of the baby’s mother as Agnes, adding that she just left the camp. Eze Ahoada said the Gov. Chibuike Amaechi committee on flood victims, led by his deputy, Tele Ikulu, recognised only six of the camps, leaving out 15. Residents of Ekpere, he said, took up the challenge of taking care of victims in such camps. He explained that Eze Robinson O. Robinson, Eze of Ekpeye kingdom, raised a 12-man committee to take care of the15 camps allegedly abandoned by the state government. “The challenge in running those 15 camps had been very huge, only the Ekpeye King, Eze Robinson O. Robinson and other well-meaning sons of Ekpeye have been making donations for the sustenance of 15 camps abandoned by the government,” he said.
The Eze Ahoada pleaded with Governor Amaechi, to recognise the camps since the victims are also indigenes of the state. He also called on charity organisations and multinational oil companies, operating in Ekpeye, to take care of natives of their host communities, saying it was only Total Oil E&P that had so far made direct donation to the Ekpeye committee on flood victims.
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://sunnewsonline.com/new/cover/death-toll-in-rivers-floods-rises-to-30/
He spoke with Daily Sun in his palace in Ahoada. “Over 30 deaths in less than three weeks, the average of 10 persons in just one week is, indeed, very alarming. This high rate of death is most disturbing,’’ he said in an emotion-laden voice. According to him, no day passes without recording, at least, two deaths. He said the alleged failure by the state government to recognise most of the camps compounded the problem.
Investigation by Daily Sun showed that two inmates, a man and a woman, had earlier died at Community Secondary School, Edeoha camp, while in UBE camp in Ahoada, Town, Mr. Goodluck Agi, said to be a native of Ihuike town, died on October 25. The councillor, representing the ward, Marvin, confirmed this, saying the late Agi started vomiting on October 24 and was rushed to the General Hospital where he died.
The Ahoada monarch said a man died at Odiemenyi the same day while two men gave up the ghost the following day, one at Alakpata, another at Odiokwo. He also disclosed how a woman was delivered of triplets and two died as a result of lack of medical care.
The lady was among the displaced persons camped at the General Hospital, one of the camps the government allegedly refused to recognise. “As a result, the woman and her new babies were denied medical care in the hospital where she gave birth,” he claimed.
As if to confirm what the traditional ruler said earlier, there was a report last Friday afternoon that another child, a year-old, just died at the General Hospital camp. The reporter, who had been at Ahoada for the past three days, monitoring the situation, rushed to the camp and the inmates confirmed the sad news, alleging that the hospital refused to treat the child since it was not a recognised camp.
They gave the name of the baby’s mother as Agnes, adding that she just left the camp. Eze Ahoada said the Gov. Chibuike Amaechi committee on flood victims, led by his deputy, Tele Ikulu, recognised only six of the camps, leaving out 15. Residents of Ekpere, he said, took up the challenge of taking care of victims in such camps. He explained that Eze Robinson O. Robinson, Eze of Ekpeye kingdom, raised a 12-man committee to take care of the15 camps allegedly abandoned by the state government. “The challenge in running those 15 camps had been very huge, only the Ekpeye King, Eze Robinson O. Robinson and other well-meaning sons of Ekpeye have been making donations for the sustenance of 15 camps abandoned by the government,” he said.
The Eze Ahoada pleaded with Governor Amaechi, to recognise the camps since the victims are also indigenes of the state. He also called on charity organisations and multinational oil companies, operating in Ekpeye, to take care of natives of their host communities, saying it was only Total Oil E&P that had so far made direct donation to the Ekpeye committee on flood victims.
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://sunnewsonline.com/new/cover/death-toll-in-rivers-floods-rises-to-30/
Four Oshikoto crash victims still not identified
Since Saturday grieving families have been streaming to the Oshakati police mortuary to identify the bodies of their loved ones, who were tragically killed in a horrific accident that claimed nine lives and left over 30 others injured.
On Saturday at around 01:00, police reported that seven people died on impact - 35km from Tsumeb on the road to Oshivelo - when a truck collided head-on with a Namib Contract Haulage (NCH) bus carrying 64 passengers.
The identified victims include 17-yearold Josef Elungi, 45-year-old Ndilipo Penias Amwala and 47-year-old Linus Laban. The bodies of 64-year-old Petrus Iikukutu and the only female victim identifi ed so far, Majain-Nambula Shambwila (age unknown), were transported from the Tsumeb State Hospital to the Oshakati police mortuary yesterday morning. They succumbed to their injuries a few hours after the accident.
Unit Commander of the Oshakati Police Mortuary, Warrant Officer Josef Namuandi, insists that despite media reports that 10 people had died; only nine bodies have been recovered. He further urged other families who suspect their relatives were travelling in the same bus to come forward as four bodies - three female and one male - have not yet been identified.
Preliminary reports claim that the truck driver, who also lost his life in the accident, swerved from his lane and ploughed into the incoming bus.
The truck only had two occupants, one of whom is reportedly fighting for his life in the ICU at a Windhoek hospital.
He was airlifted to the capital along with another crash victim. Oshikoto Police Chief, Commissioner Anna-Marie Nainda, yesterday said although the condition of the two passengers who were airlifted to Windhoek due to the critical nature of their injuries had not changed, the death toll remains at nine. She also took issue with the Motor Vehicle Accident (MVA) Fund informing the media that 10 people, instead of nine, had died in the accident.
“I don’t know where the tenth person came from. I called MVA to enquire where they got their information from, but I haven’t received any word from them yet,” said Nainda.
MVA Fund’s spokesperson Catherine Shipushu told Namibian Sun that their records still has the fatalities at 10.
“According to the information given to us by the police who attended the accident scene, nine people died on the spot and a tenth person died at the Tsumeb hospital,” she explained.
Shipushu did, however, admit that the police, as the custodian of accident reports, are in a better position to confirm the exact number of fatalities.
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://www.namibiansun.com/content/national-news/four-oshikoto-crash-victims-still-not-identified
On Saturday at around 01:00, police reported that seven people died on impact - 35km from Tsumeb on the road to Oshivelo - when a truck collided head-on with a Namib Contract Haulage (NCH) bus carrying 64 passengers.
The identified victims include 17-yearold Josef Elungi, 45-year-old Ndilipo Penias Amwala and 47-year-old Linus Laban. The bodies of 64-year-old Petrus Iikukutu and the only female victim identifi ed so far, Majain-Nambula Shambwila (age unknown), were transported from the Tsumeb State Hospital to the Oshakati police mortuary yesterday morning. They succumbed to their injuries a few hours after the accident.
Unit Commander of the Oshakati Police Mortuary, Warrant Officer Josef Namuandi, insists that despite media reports that 10 people had died; only nine bodies have been recovered. He further urged other families who suspect their relatives were travelling in the same bus to come forward as four bodies - three female and one male - have not yet been identified.
Preliminary reports claim that the truck driver, who also lost his life in the accident, swerved from his lane and ploughed into the incoming bus.
The truck only had two occupants, one of whom is reportedly fighting for his life in the ICU at a Windhoek hospital.
He was airlifted to the capital along with another crash victim. Oshikoto Police Chief, Commissioner Anna-Marie Nainda, yesterday said although the condition of the two passengers who were airlifted to Windhoek due to the critical nature of their injuries had not changed, the death toll remains at nine. She also took issue with the Motor Vehicle Accident (MVA) Fund informing the media that 10 people, instead of nine, had died in the accident.
“I don’t know where the tenth person came from. I called MVA to enquire where they got their information from, but I haven’t received any word from them yet,” said Nainda.
MVA Fund’s spokesperson Catherine Shipushu told Namibian Sun that their records still has the fatalities at 10.
“According to the information given to us by the police who attended the accident scene, nine people died on the spot and a tenth person died at the Tsumeb hospital,” she explained.
Shipushu did, however, admit that the police, as the custodian of accident reports, are in a better position to confirm the exact number of fatalities.
Tuesday 30 October 2012
http://www.namibiansun.com/content/national-news/four-oshikoto-crash-victims-still-not-identified
Monday, 29 October 2012
Missing persons event draws relatives of 23 missing people in Arkansas
When a decomposing body was pulled from between two barges on the Mississippi River in Mississippi County on April 19, 2003, investigators were left with few clues to determine its identity.
The barges had traveled from New Orleans, with a planned drop-off in Greenville, Miss., but no missing persons cases immediately matched with the body, which investigators could only determine was that of a white man between 30-60 years old.
One promising clue was dental work inscribed with a name: Thompson.
Several years later, after Chris Edwards began handling unidentified-remains cases for the state Crime Laboratory, attention turned back to the man between the barges and his dental work.
"We got lucky to have that name in there," Edwards said.
Edwards contacted dentists in New Orleans and Greenville to see if they had put the work in place, but he said many dentists no longer write names or numbers on dental work.
He also sent the body's mandible to the University of North Texas Health Science Center's Center for Human Identification in September 2009.
After the center obtained DNA from the bone, came "a waiting period," Edwards said.
On April 1, 2011, Edwards received notice that the remains had been identified by a family's DNA sample as that of an Illinois man named Roy Thompson.
But Edwards' goal is to put a name to all of the skeletons in his closet.
As the unidentified human remains and missing persons coordinator at the state Crime Laboratory, Edwards works to identify the bodies using personal objects, dental work and DNA.
According to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, a registry for such cases, Arkansas has recorded 119 unidentified persons since 1970.
Of those cases, only 12 have been closed.
In a small room in the basement of the state crime lab, about 80 of the unidentified bodies are stored in various sized cardboard boxes and plastic bags. Some are complete skeletons, others just a handful of bone fragments.
On a 10-foot-tall metal shelving unit, dozens of these boxes and bags are stacked, each marked with a case number and the year the remains were found.
Inside the containers, every body displays its own history: a jaw wired shut, a broken bone, capped teeth and other dental work.
And as the "straight John or Jane Doe" cases come in, about 10 a year, Edwards chips away at the total.
"The unidentified bodies, I'm not letting those go anywhere," Edwards said. "Those are going to stay until they get identified."
Edwards now has DNA samples on file for nearly all of the unidentified remains in the agency's bone room.
The remaining samples area waiting testing, part of a normal backlog at the UNT Center for Human Identification, said George W. Adams, the national director of operations for NamUs, at the center's Forensic Science Unit.
He said when working with robotics, which run batches of up to 90 samples at a time, a small backlog is needed so the batches are always full.
"We need to make everything as efficient as we can," Adams said. "The more efficient that we can become, the faster we can get the samples out and the more associations we can make."
He said the unit, which operates on grant funding and does not charge law enforcement for testing or expert testimony, is geared toward turning over samples as quickly as possible to move investigations forward.
"In law enforcement, every hour, every day that there's a delay in making an association or identification or getting a result means there's more investigative work going on and that's driving up the cost of operations," Adams said.
Edwards said the DNA work provided by the Center for Human Identification has breathed new life in some cases. He said while reviewing an unidentified body's file, he found scalp hair that he was able to send off to the lab.
In another case, where a hunter found a partial skull in a wooded area in Ozark in1985, DNA testing helped identify the man in 2010 by samples provided by his daughters.
"A single bone makes it very hard, even though I can send that bone off for DNA and get those results back," Edwards said. "If I don't get a hit, it'll stay in the unidentified database indefinitely until there is a hit."
With a lack of clues, he said, getting a family member's DNA into the NamUs system could provide the link to closing an unidentified person's case file.
Edwards has been working directly with law enforcement agencies since February 2011 to pursue the families of missing persons and obtain DNA samples for those cases.
He said he plans to hold several missing-persons events next year after the success of a similar event in August 2011.
Of the roughly 165 missing persons cases in the state at the time, Edwards said he had family contact information for 30. But family members of 23 missing persons came out and provided about 45 samples, which could provide a future match to an unidentified body.
"That's the main thing, is finding families who have missing loved ones and get their information, get them in, get their DNA and send it in to the database," Edwards said.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/f0575ea192e341b68be2ed4bf1d71ac2/AR--Unidentified-Remains-Arkansas
The barges had traveled from New Orleans, with a planned drop-off in Greenville, Miss., but no missing persons cases immediately matched with the body, which investigators could only determine was that of a white man between 30-60 years old.
One promising clue was dental work inscribed with a name: Thompson.
Several years later, after Chris Edwards began handling unidentified-remains cases for the state Crime Laboratory, attention turned back to the man between the barges and his dental work.
"We got lucky to have that name in there," Edwards said.
Edwards contacted dentists in New Orleans and Greenville to see if they had put the work in place, but he said many dentists no longer write names or numbers on dental work.
He also sent the body's mandible to the University of North Texas Health Science Center's Center for Human Identification in September 2009.
After the center obtained DNA from the bone, came "a waiting period," Edwards said.
On April 1, 2011, Edwards received notice that the remains had been identified by a family's DNA sample as that of an Illinois man named Roy Thompson.
But Edwards' goal is to put a name to all of the skeletons in his closet.
As the unidentified human remains and missing persons coordinator at the state Crime Laboratory, Edwards works to identify the bodies using personal objects, dental work and DNA.
According to the National Missing and Unidentified Persons System, a registry for such cases, Arkansas has recorded 119 unidentified persons since 1970.
Of those cases, only 12 have been closed.
In a small room in the basement of the state crime lab, about 80 of the unidentified bodies are stored in various sized cardboard boxes and plastic bags. Some are complete skeletons, others just a handful of bone fragments.
On a 10-foot-tall metal shelving unit, dozens of these boxes and bags are stacked, each marked with a case number and the year the remains were found.
Inside the containers, every body displays its own history: a jaw wired shut, a broken bone, capped teeth and other dental work.
And as the "straight John or Jane Doe" cases come in, about 10 a year, Edwards chips away at the total.
"The unidentified bodies, I'm not letting those go anywhere," Edwards said. "Those are going to stay until they get identified."
Edwards now has DNA samples on file for nearly all of the unidentified remains in the agency's bone room.
The remaining samples area waiting testing, part of a normal backlog at the UNT Center for Human Identification, said George W. Adams, the national director of operations for NamUs, at the center's Forensic Science Unit.
He said when working with robotics, which run batches of up to 90 samples at a time, a small backlog is needed so the batches are always full.
"We need to make everything as efficient as we can," Adams said. "The more efficient that we can become, the faster we can get the samples out and the more associations we can make."
He said the unit, which operates on grant funding and does not charge law enforcement for testing or expert testimony, is geared toward turning over samples as quickly as possible to move investigations forward.
"In law enforcement, every hour, every day that there's a delay in making an association or identification or getting a result means there's more investigative work going on and that's driving up the cost of operations," Adams said.
Edwards said the DNA work provided by the Center for Human Identification has breathed new life in some cases. He said while reviewing an unidentified body's file, he found scalp hair that he was able to send off to the lab.
In another case, where a hunter found a partial skull in a wooded area in Ozark in1985, DNA testing helped identify the man in 2010 by samples provided by his daughters.
"A single bone makes it very hard, even though I can send that bone off for DNA and get those results back," Edwards said. "If I don't get a hit, it'll stay in the unidentified database indefinitely until there is a hit."
With a lack of clues, he said, getting a family member's DNA into the NamUs system could provide the link to closing an unidentified person's case file.
Edwards has been working directly with law enforcement agencies since February 2011 to pursue the families of missing persons and obtain DNA samples for those cases.
He said he plans to hold several missing-persons events next year after the success of a similar event in August 2011.
Of the roughly 165 missing persons cases in the state at the time, Edwards said he had family contact information for 30. But family members of 23 missing persons came out and provided about 45 samples, which could provide a future match to an unidentified body.
"That's the main thing, is finding families who have missing loved ones and get their information, get them in, get their DNA and send it in to the database," Edwards said.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.therepublic.com/view/story/f0575ea192e341b68be2ed4bf1d71ac2/AR--Unidentified-Remains-Arkansas
The Unnamed of Calderon Leave Their Mark
Mexico • 24,102 people: the equivalent of half a football stadium or a medium-sized town is the approximate number of bodies that have gone to the grave at the end of the current administration. And most importantly, it is a highly conservative estimate. It does includes full records of Mexico's most violent states, such as Guerrero, Michoacan, Sinaloa and Tamaulipas.
Throughout the six years of Calderon's Presidency, thousands of bodies have been buried in obscurity. Several more bodies are added every week: They are migrants, innocents, homeless, homeless families, criminals, and victims of homicide. There are bones and bodily remains apparently unclaimed without owners, which are often buried and stacked in cemeteries across the country from the U.S. border to the Yucatan Peninsula. These faceless corpses are listed in official records only as NN. No Name.
Extensive research from Milenio, based on over 470 records requests filed with state forensic medical services, municipal governments and even with the administration of small local cemeteries, brings a rough sketch that outlines a national atlas of unidentified bodies.
Among the data emerging from the research are two parallel events: 1) some attorneys general do not want to reveal the numbers of unidentified dead under their power. And 2) the number of bodies sent to grave has climbed every year since the beginning of Calderon's term, on par with the number of executed criminals and victims killed in violence overall. On average, 10 bodies unclaimed name or have been buried daily.
So far, with the figures for 2012 still unfinished and updated only through August 2011, and September, 2011 starts a period in which the remains of more people were placed in public areas, without the benefit of a tombstone which completely ending the identification process: 4, 927 corpses never were claimed in that year, during which, coincidentally, it was the year with the highest number of executions linked to organized crime in all of Felipe Calderón's administration.
The picture painted by the obtained documents clearly shows that in some cities, like Juarez and Monterrey, and Celaya, many corpses were in state of abandonment that were left to he abilities of the cemetery to process.. Consequently, new ditches in cemeteries have had to be excavated. It is a scenario that is repeated across the Republic, with mass graves or cemeteries running out of space, they have begun to recycle their spaces, removing and discarding the remains of seven years old.
Some cities and states saw the number of unidentified -NNs (no-names) rapidly multiply. In Nayarit, the figures tripled in three years. In Baja California, they grew by 100 percent. In Torreón, they multiplied 10 times. In the port of Veracruz, there were over a thousand unidentified bodies in 2011. Durango, they went from having eight bodies buried without a name in 2006 jumped to 438 in 2011 (see graphic above).
Not only that. The lack of control in the management of unidentified remains in many government entities, but also this is found in many private entities as well, as evidenced by several of the responses in this process. The report which took more than three months in development and for which it was necessary to create a database from accumulated data with thousands of figures. But these are the ones that have been recovered: the missing may never be computed. Fifty municipalities have lost their files prior to 2008 and 2009 and many have lost records from the location of bodies which makes later further study, investigation and identification unlikely.
Some states, such as Michoacan, never recognized integrating a state-based data on unidentified bodies and have only just begun that process, although the violence has left thousands killed in that state. The Michoacan Attorney General can not answer how many bodies the medical examiner received in the administration. "No statistic has the" justified reliance.
"The information on unidentified bodies held by government which have entered the medical examiner is not located together in one place or well documented in a single organized relationship over the entire state." But the PGJE-Michoacán said they are already working to correct this deficiency.
Requests for transparency, which will be available for public consultation www.milenio.com not only gives an idea of the general situation of unidentified bodies, but shows different levels of progress in terms of transparency in the country and states.
To obtain the data, it was necessary to use emails and state portals (Infomex, Saimex, Guanajuato Unit), without neglecting numerous phone calls and liaison to Social Communication to correct "mistakes" such as file loss, illegible documents and pages offline for weeks.
A total of 479 petitions submitted under pseudonyms, some were answered but some 191-230 all went unanswered. That is, they were completely ignored by the authorities. Another 40 applications were rejected, declared missing or classified as confidential state security.
Many states and municipalities provided the information without delay, as the Federal District, Sonora, Chihuahua and Guanajuato, among others. Their municipalities administrations relations' prepared detailed statistics, held their forensic medical services and burial administrations open. In general, information was available in 25 of the 31 states and over 210 cities and towns.
It is these responses that arise the well disguised facts detailing how Mexico processes the nameless dead. For example, the bodies in Jalisco after taking a DNA sample are burned. The remaining ashes and a small jar with genetic material remain in niches, waiting for a possible identification. On the other hand, Monterrey is very precise: keeps track of pathological parts, ie limbs, organs retrieved from hospitals or in public. Some cities in Sonora to open their old graves of people who no longer have family and Pachuca records fetuses - aborted, or abandoned - among all the bodies sent to their graves.
But there is the other side. There are states that did their best not to reveal the number of unidentified bodies processed in forensic services. Despite repeated calls, it was impossible to locate any transparency in the Office of Tamaulipas and that agency spokesman, Ruben Dario, said flatly that "there is no such data anyway because there was a transition of government and we do not know what happened before. He went further: Tamaulipas does not collect corpses because "that is the job of the Attorney General."
Some states shaved their numbers or have calculation mistakes. The Attorney General of Sinaloa reported only a few bodies were sent in to their company of calculation. only 54 dead bodies from the mass graves in 2011, and 227 in the entire administration. But a simple review of the medical service page, where scanned images are stored for unclaimed bodies, puts skepticism and doubts on those numbers. Its database of unidentified, unclaimed deceased located a total of 332 people during the administration. 91 bodies in 2011 alone, double the figure reported via transparency-were left in the hands the coroner.
In other states requesting the information, it turned out to be a tangled process and impossible to fulfill. In states like Oaxaca it is asked to bring a printed card facilities its attorney. In Campeche and Chiapas no transparency or even reliable systems: its pages are several months out of service and don't support questions. Baja California Sur has not bothered to open a service at all yet.
The State of Mexico deserves mention. Data from corpses in mass graves were obtained by their municipalities and their central government, which put various obstacles to prevent the information was disclosed. While most municipalities mexiquenses data revealed their bodies were sent to the pit, the Attorney General made "mistakes" attaching files to the responses on its website. the unit promised responsible for its transparency, "It will be resolved quickly," but a month has passed.
Beyond the technical problems, there are the negatives. That was the case of the Attorney General from the Offices of Veracruz and Aguascalientes as well as the prosecution office in Yucatán. The first two entities classified data as confidential, all information relating to the number of bodies received and processed by their respective forensic services (although municipalities delivered their data promptly without any problem). The Yucatan, for instance declared itself incompetent to answer any questions because, they said, that is not within its powers to have the bodies.
With respect to Veracruz, the argument went thus far: they literally said that the permanence of government, its institutions and to the territorial integrity of the state "would be at risk" to be known such data, in addition it would "invade privacy" of the unknown corpses.
Milenio appealed to the Veracruz Institute of Access Information (LAVI) to review that decision convinced that there is no invasion of privacy of a body without identity. Also cited was one of the criteria of the Federal Institute of Access to Information statistics stating that, whatever their nature, is public.
In the end, the LAVI ruled in favor of this newspaper to consider their arguments and held that the argument of the Attorney Veracruz "lacked legal validity." So far, the PGJE has not complied with the mandate to disclose its files of unidentified bodies.
Despite that, some thirty Veracruz municipalities themselves provided the information requested. And it was this that allowed the construction of a map, incomplete but functional, on the situation of unidentified bodies and unclaimed in Veracruz. From this data it was revealed that the state has resorted to more graves. In total, six years so far and still waiting for the state figures that the attorney could generate, municipal administrations have documented burial of 5,245 people. The highest figure in the entire country.
24,102 people is the most concrete figure has been added under this methodology. And yet, it is a conservative figure. Beyond Monterrey, failed to ask the municipal level in violent entities such as Nuevo Leon-Guerrero much less, and the requests that were made to the municipalities of Sinaloa Infomex system disappeared by a "computer error" that two months later, has not been corrected by the State Commission on Access to Public Information. There were lost data from Culiacán, Badiraguato, Mazatlan and Los Mochis that, most likely, it would have increased the number of NNs (no names).
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2012/10/the-unnamed-of-calderon-leave-their-mark.html
Throughout the six years of Calderon's Presidency, thousands of bodies have been buried in obscurity. Several more bodies are added every week: They are migrants, innocents, homeless, homeless families, criminals, and victims of homicide. There are bones and bodily remains apparently unclaimed without owners, which are often buried and stacked in cemeteries across the country from the U.S. border to the Yucatan Peninsula. These faceless corpses are listed in official records only as NN. No Name.
Extensive research from Milenio, based on over 470 records requests filed with state forensic medical services, municipal governments and even with the administration of small local cemeteries, brings a rough sketch that outlines a national atlas of unidentified bodies.
Among the data emerging from the research are two parallel events: 1) some attorneys general do not want to reveal the numbers of unidentified dead under their power. And 2) the number of bodies sent to grave has climbed every year since the beginning of Calderon's term, on par with the number of executed criminals and victims killed in violence overall. On average, 10 bodies unclaimed name or have been buried daily.
So far, with the figures for 2012 still unfinished and updated only through August 2011, and September, 2011 starts a period in which the remains of more people were placed in public areas, without the benefit of a tombstone which completely ending the identification process: 4, 927 corpses never were claimed in that year, during which, coincidentally, it was the year with the highest number of executions linked to organized crime in all of Felipe Calderón's administration.
The picture painted by the obtained documents clearly shows that in some cities, like Juarez and Monterrey, and Celaya, many corpses were in state of abandonment that were left to he abilities of the cemetery to process.. Consequently, new ditches in cemeteries have had to be excavated. It is a scenario that is repeated across the Republic, with mass graves or cemeteries running out of space, they have begun to recycle their spaces, removing and discarding the remains of seven years old.
Some cities and states saw the number of unidentified -NNs (no-names) rapidly multiply. In Nayarit, the figures tripled in three years. In Baja California, they grew by 100 percent. In Torreón, they multiplied 10 times. In the port of Veracruz, there were over a thousand unidentified bodies in 2011. Durango, they went from having eight bodies buried without a name in 2006 jumped to 438 in 2011 (see graphic above).
Not only that. The lack of control in the management of unidentified remains in many government entities, but also this is found in many private entities as well, as evidenced by several of the responses in this process. The report which took more than three months in development and for which it was necessary to create a database from accumulated data with thousands of figures. But these are the ones that have been recovered: the missing may never be computed. Fifty municipalities have lost their files prior to 2008 and 2009 and many have lost records from the location of bodies which makes later further study, investigation and identification unlikely.
Some states, such as Michoacan, never recognized integrating a state-based data on unidentified bodies and have only just begun that process, although the violence has left thousands killed in that state. The Michoacan Attorney General can not answer how many bodies the medical examiner received in the administration. "No statistic has the" justified reliance.
"The information on unidentified bodies held by government which have entered the medical examiner is not located together in one place or well documented in a single organized relationship over the entire state." But the PGJE-Michoacán said they are already working to correct this deficiency.
Requests for transparency, which will be available for public consultation www.milenio.com not only gives an idea of the general situation of unidentified bodies, but shows different levels of progress in terms of transparency in the country and states.
To obtain the data, it was necessary to use emails and state portals (Infomex, Saimex, Guanajuato Unit), without neglecting numerous phone calls and liaison to Social Communication to correct "mistakes" such as file loss, illegible documents and pages offline for weeks.
A total of 479 petitions submitted under pseudonyms, some were answered but some 191-230 all went unanswered. That is, they were completely ignored by the authorities. Another 40 applications were rejected, declared missing or classified as confidential state security.
Many states and municipalities provided the information without delay, as the Federal District, Sonora, Chihuahua and Guanajuato, among others. Their municipalities administrations relations' prepared detailed statistics, held their forensic medical services and burial administrations open. In general, information was available in 25 of the 31 states and over 210 cities and towns.
It is these responses that arise the well disguised facts detailing how Mexico processes the nameless dead. For example, the bodies in Jalisco after taking a DNA sample are burned. The remaining ashes and a small jar with genetic material remain in niches, waiting for a possible identification. On the other hand, Monterrey is very precise: keeps track of pathological parts, ie limbs, organs retrieved from hospitals or in public. Some cities in Sonora to open their old graves of people who no longer have family and Pachuca records fetuses - aborted, or abandoned - among all the bodies sent to their graves.
But there is the other side. There are states that did their best not to reveal the number of unidentified bodies processed in forensic services. Despite repeated calls, it was impossible to locate any transparency in the Office of Tamaulipas and that agency spokesman, Ruben Dario, said flatly that "there is no such data anyway because there was a transition of government and we do not know what happened before. He went further: Tamaulipas does not collect corpses because "that is the job of the Attorney General."
Some states shaved their numbers or have calculation mistakes. The Attorney General of Sinaloa reported only a few bodies were sent in to their company of calculation. only 54 dead bodies from the mass graves in 2011, and 227 in the entire administration. But a simple review of the medical service page, where scanned images are stored for unclaimed bodies, puts skepticism and doubts on those numbers. Its database of unidentified, unclaimed deceased located a total of 332 people during the administration. 91 bodies in 2011 alone, double the figure reported via transparency-were left in the hands the coroner.
In other states requesting the information, it turned out to be a tangled process and impossible to fulfill. In states like Oaxaca it is asked to bring a printed card facilities its attorney. In Campeche and Chiapas no transparency or even reliable systems: its pages are several months out of service and don't support questions. Baja California Sur has not bothered to open a service at all yet.
The State of Mexico deserves mention. Data from corpses in mass graves were obtained by their municipalities and their central government, which put various obstacles to prevent the information was disclosed. While most municipalities mexiquenses data revealed their bodies were sent to the pit, the Attorney General made "mistakes" attaching files to the responses on its website. the unit promised responsible for its transparency, "It will be resolved quickly," but a month has passed.
Beyond the technical problems, there are the negatives. That was the case of the Attorney General from the Offices of Veracruz and Aguascalientes as well as the prosecution office in Yucatán. The first two entities classified data as confidential, all information relating to the number of bodies received and processed by their respective forensic services (although municipalities delivered their data promptly without any problem). The Yucatan, for instance declared itself incompetent to answer any questions because, they said, that is not within its powers to have the bodies.
With respect to Veracruz, the argument went thus far: they literally said that the permanence of government, its institutions and to the territorial integrity of the state "would be at risk" to be known such data, in addition it would "invade privacy" of the unknown corpses.
Milenio appealed to the Veracruz Institute of Access Information (LAVI) to review that decision convinced that there is no invasion of privacy of a body without identity. Also cited was one of the criteria of the Federal Institute of Access to Information statistics stating that, whatever their nature, is public.
In the end, the LAVI ruled in favor of this newspaper to consider their arguments and held that the argument of the Attorney Veracruz "lacked legal validity." So far, the PGJE has not complied with the mandate to disclose its files of unidentified bodies.
Despite that, some thirty Veracruz municipalities themselves provided the information requested. And it was this that allowed the construction of a map, incomplete but functional, on the situation of unidentified bodies and unclaimed in Veracruz. From this data it was revealed that the state has resorted to more graves. In total, six years so far and still waiting for the state figures that the attorney could generate, municipal administrations have documented burial of 5,245 people. The highest figure in the entire country.
24,102 people is the most concrete figure has been added under this methodology. And yet, it is a conservative figure. Beyond Monterrey, failed to ask the municipal level in violent entities such as Nuevo Leon-Guerrero much less, and the requests that were made to the municipalities of Sinaloa Infomex system disappeared by a "computer error" that two months later, has not been corrected by the State Commission on Access to Public Information. There were lost data from Culiacán, Badiraguato, Mazatlan and Los Mochis that, most likely, it would have increased the number of NNs (no names).
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.borderlandbeat.com/2012/10/the-unnamed-of-calderon-leave-their-mark.html
Powerful storm kills at least 30 in Philippines, Vietnam
As Hurricane Sandy lashes the East Coast of the United States with wind and rain, Southeast Asia is dealing with the trail of death and damage from a powerful storm that has killed at least 30 people in the region over the past few days.
Tropical Storm Son-Tinh was moving northeast along the northern Vietnamese coast on Monday after tearing the roofs off hundreds of houses and breaching flood defenses overnight, the state-run Vietnam News Agency (VNA) reported.
Son-Tinh was at typhoon level when it thumped into northern Vietnam late Sunday with winds as strong as 133 kilometers per hour (83 mph). It left three people dead and two injured, according to an initial estimate from the Office of the National Search and Rescue Committee reported by (VNA).
More than a 1,300 rescue workers and soldiers have been deployed to work with local authorities on search and rescue efforts in the aftermath of the storm, VNA said. Helicopters were on standby for a search and rescue mission for an oil rig with 35 people on board that became disconnected from its towboats miles out at sea amid strong waves generated by the storm, according to VNA.
And five people were missing Sunday after winds from Son-Tinh sank an engineering vessel near a cargo terminal in Sanya, a city on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported.
Son-Tinh is expected to gradually weaken over the course of Monday, regional weather agencies said. At least 260,000 people in Vietnam had been relocated to safer areas as it approached Sunday.
The storm had already killed 27 people when it swept across the central Philippines during the second half of last week, causing flash floods and landslides, according to the Philippine National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council. Nine people remain missing, the council said Monday.
East Asia is buffeted for several months a year by heavy storms that roll in from the western Pacific Ocean. In August, a big typhoon, named Bolaven, killed more than 60 people on the Korean peninsula.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/10/29/world/asia/vietnam-tropical-storm/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
Tropical Storm Son-Tinh was moving northeast along the northern Vietnamese coast on Monday after tearing the roofs off hundreds of houses and breaching flood defenses overnight, the state-run Vietnam News Agency (VNA) reported.
Son-Tinh was at typhoon level when it thumped into northern Vietnam late Sunday with winds as strong as 133 kilometers per hour (83 mph). It left three people dead and two injured, according to an initial estimate from the Office of the National Search and Rescue Committee reported by (VNA).
More than a 1,300 rescue workers and soldiers have been deployed to work with local authorities on search and rescue efforts in the aftermath of the storm, VNA said. Helicopters were on standby for a search and rescue mission for an oil rig with 35 people on board that became disconnected from its towboats miles out at sea amid strong waves generated by the storm, according to VNA.
And five people were missing Sunday after winds from Son-Tinh sank an engineering vessel near a cargo terminal in Sanya, a city on the southern Chinese island of Hainan, China's state-run news agency Xinhua reported.
Son-Tinh is expected to gradually weaken over the course of Monday, regional weather agencies said. At least 260,000 people in Vietnam had been relocated to safer areas as it approached Sunday.
The storm had already killed 27 people when it swept across the central Philippines during the second half of last week, causing flash floods and landslides, according to the Philippine National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council. Nine people remain missing, the council said Monday.
East Asia is buffeted for several months a year by heavy storms that roll in from the western Pacific Ocean. In August, a big typhoon, named Bolaven, killed more than 60 people on the Korean peninsula.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://edition.cnn.com/2012/10/29/world/asia/vietnam-tropical-storm/index.html?hpt=hp_t2
Hurricane Sandy: Death Toll Rises To 65 In Caribbean
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — As Americans braced Sunday for Hurricane Sandy, Haiti was still suffering.
Officials raised the storm-related death toll across the Caribbean to 65, with 51 of those coming in Haiti, which was pelted by three days of constant rains that ended only on Friday.
As the rains stopped and rivers began to recede, authorities were getting a fuller idea of how much damage Sandy brought on Haiti. Bridges collapsed. Banana crops were ruined. Homes were underwater. Officials said the death toll might still rise.
"This is a disaster of major proportions," Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe told The Associated Press, adding with a touch of hyperbole, "The whole south is under water."
The country's ramshackle housing and denuded hillsides are especially vulnerable to flooding. The bulk of the deaths were in the southern part of the country and the area around Port-au-Prince, the capital, which holds most of the 370,000 Haitians who are still living in flimsy shelters as a result of the devastating 2010 earthquake.
Santos Alexis, mayor of the southern city of Leogane, said Sunday that the rivers were receding and that people were beginning to dry their belongings in the sun.
"Things are back to being a little quiet," Alexis said by telephone. "We have seen the end."
Sandy also killed 11 in Cuba, where officials said it destroyed or damaged tens of thousands of houses. Deaths were also reported in Jamaica, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico. Authorities in the Dominican Republic said the storm destroyed several bridges and isolated at least 130 communities while damaging an estimated 3,500 homes.
In the Bahamas, Wolf Seyfert, operations director at local airline Western Air, said the domestic terminal of Grand Bahamas' airport received "substantial damage" from Sandy's battering storm surge and would need to be rebuilt.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/28/hurricane-sandy-death-toll_n_2034085.html
Officials raised the storm-related death toll across the Caribbean to 65, with 51 of those coming in Haiti, which was pelted by three days of constant rains that ended only on Friday.
As the rains stopped and rivers began to recede, authorities were getting a fuller idea of how much damage Sandy brought on Haiti. Bridges collapsed. Banana crops were ruined. Homes were underwater. Officials said the death toll might still rise.
"This is a disaster of major proportions," Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe told The Associated Press, adding with a touch of hyperbole, "The whole south is under water."
The country's ramshackle housing and denuded hillsides are especially vulnerable to flooding. The bulk of the deaths were in the southern part of the country and the area around Port-au-Prince, the capital, which holds most of the 370,000 Haitians who are still living in flimsy shelters as a result of the devastating 2010 earthquake.
Santos Alexis, mayor of the southern city of Leogane, said Sunday that the rivers were receding and that people were beginning to dry their belongings in the sun.
"Things are back to being a little quiet," Alexis said by telephone. "We have seen the end."
Sandy also killed 11 in Cuba, where officials said it destroyed or damaged tens of thousands of houses. Deaths were also reported in Jamaica, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico. Authorities in the Dominican Republic said the storm destroyed several bridges and isolated at least 130 communities while damaging an estimated 3,500 homes.
In the Bahamas, Wolf Seyfert, operations director at local airline Western Air, said the domestic terminal of Grand Bahamas' airport received "substantial damage" from Sandy's battering storm surge and would need to be rebuilt.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.huffingtonpost.com/2012/10/28/hurricane-sandy-death-toll_n_2034085.html
Smolensk disaster victim identification
th the body of Tadeusz Lutoborski, the chairman of the Katyń Families organization, both of whom were victims of the April 10, 2010 airplane crash in Smolensk that killed 96 people, radio station RMF FM quotes unnamed investigators as saying.
Polish prosecutors haven’t confirmed the reports.
On Monday last week, the bodies of Mr Kaczorowski and Mr Lutoborski were exhumed. They were then transferred to the department of forensic medicine at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, where the bodies were examined using a CT scan. DNA samples were also taken.
“We are still waiting for the DNA results, and this could take up to seven days,” the Chief Military Prosecutor’s Office spokesperson Zbigniew Rzepa told TVN24 last week.
Earlier in October reports surfaced that an official from the Polish Foreign Ministry had made a mistake and misidentified the bodies during the post-crash identification process. Polish online news provider Onet.pl reported that more exhumations could be in store, all of which are a result of procedural errors made in the aftermath of the catastrophe.
Mr Kaczorowski’s was the sixth body to have been exhumed so far. Prosecutors have decided to go ahead with the exhumation after analyzing medical records, which pointed to errors that could have led to victims’ bodies being misidentified.
In September, the bodies of two Smolensk victims were exhumed, one in Warsaw and one in Kraków. Following DNA testing, prosecutors confirmed that the bodies of Anna Walentynowicz, legendary activist of the Solidarity trade union movement, and Teresa Walewska-Przyjałkowska, vice-president of the Golgotha of the East foundation, had been switched.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.wbj.pl/article-60819-spotlight-smolensk-disaster-victim-identification.html
Polish prosecutors haven’t confirmed the reports.
On Monday last week, the bodies of Mr Kaczorowski and Mr Lutoborski were exhumed. They were then transferred to the department of forensic medicine at the Jagiellonian University in Kraków, where the bodies were examined using a CT scan. DNA samples were also taken.
“We are still waiting for the DNA results, and this could take up to seven days,” the Chief Military Prosecutor’s Office spokesperson Zbigniew Rzepa told TVN24 last week.
Earlier in October reports surfaced that an official from the Polish Foreign Ministry had made a mistake and misidentified the bodies during the post-crash identification process. Polish online news provider Onet.pl reported that more exhumations could be in store, all of which are a result of procedural errors made in the aftermath of the catastrophe.
Mr Kaczorowski’s was the sixth body to have been exhumed so far. Prosecutors have decided to go ahead with the exhumation after analyzing medical records, which pointed to errors that could have led to victims’ bodies being misidentified.
In September, the bodies of two Smolensk victims were exhumed, one in Warsaw and one in Kraków. Following DNA testing, prosecutors confirmed that the bodies of Anna Walentynowicz, legendary activist of the Solidarity trade union movement, and Teresa Walewska-Przyjałkowska, vice-president of the Golgotha of the East foundation, had been switched.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.wbj.pl/article-60819-spotlight-smolensk-disaster-victim-identification.html
Horror crash kills 10
“IT was hell. Everyone was screaming and crying. I do not know what really happened because it was very fast like lightning.”
These were the words of Aino Iitembu (32), one of the survivors of a fatal accident which killed 10 people in the early hours of Saturday morning about 30km from Tsumeb on the road to Oshivelo.
A truck collided head-on with a Namib Contract Haulage Express Services bus after the driver allegedly swerved from his lane and ploughed into the oncoming bus. The bus was carrying 64 passengers while the truck had only two occupants.
Iitembu, a teacher of Bright Hill Pre-Primary School at Babylon in Windhoek, who was on her way to the funeral of a relative, said she did not know how she survived, because she was sitting in the front of the bus where many of the dead were sitting.
“I was sleeping and was woken up by a big bang sound,” she told The Namibian from her bed in the Oshakati State Hospital.
Most of the people in the bus were from the Ongandjera and Uukwaluudhi traditional districts and were on their way home for the weekend from Windhoek.
According to Motor Vehicle Accident Fund’s Catherine Shipushu, nine people died at the scene of the crash, while the 10th person died in hospital. The bus driver was one of those who died instantly.
“Around 28 people sustained varying degrees of injuries, with three confirmed cases of severe injuries. Two of the severely injured patients, one of whom is the truck driver, were airlifted from Tsumeb to Windhoek and are both currently in ICU. The third patient was transported to Ongwediva for further injury management. The ages and gender of the deceased have not been released as yet,” she said.
Health authorities at the Tsumeb District Hospital told The Namibian that they had treated 43 people while five were taken to Tsumeb Private Hospital.
Nine of those who where getting treatment at Tsumeb District Hospital were transferred to Oshakati State Hospital where they are currently getting treatment, the hospital said. All the bodies of those who died in the accident were taken to the Oshakati Police mortuary where relatives started arriving yesterday to identify them.
Oshana Police Commisioner Ndahangwapo Kashihakumwa called on those who might have lost relatives in the crash to go to the Oshakati Police mortuary to identify them. The Namibian arrived at the scene a few hours after the accident.
“When we got here, I couldn’t believe my eyes. Everyone was screaming and crying,” said Fritz Kantewa, an ambulance driver from Oshivelo.
Maria Sheya, a survivor and employee of the Kalahari Sands Hotel in Windhoek, said she was on her way to visit her mother in hospital.
She was also sleeping when the accident happened. So too was another survivor, Fransina Gotlieb (24), whose face was cut by broken glass.
Christofina Andreas (29) was not aware of the accident until people woke her up and told her that they had been in an accident. She also suffered cuts to her face.
Elizabeth Nakale (40) said her baby was ripped from her arms by the impact. Police later found the baby crying in the bush and returned it to her.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.namibian.com.na/news/full-story/archive/2012/october/article/horror-crash-kills-10/
These were the words of Aino Iitembu (32), one of the survivors of a fatal accident which killed 10 people in the early hours of Saturday morning about 30km from Tsumeb on the road to Oshivelo.
A truck collided head-on with a Namib Contract Haulage Express Services bus after the driver allegedly swerved from his lane and ploughed into the oncoming bus. The bus was carrying 64 passengers while the truck had only two occupants.
Iitembu, a teacher of Bright Hill Pre-Primary School at Babylon in Windhoek, who was on her way to the funeral of a relative, said she did not know how she survived, because she was sitting in the front of the bus where many of the dead were sitting.
“I was sleeping and was woken up by a big bang sound,” she told The Namibian from her bed in the Oshakati State Hospital.
Most of the people in the bus were from the Ongandjera and Uukwaluudhi traditional districts and were on their way home for the weekend from Windhoek.
According to Motor Vehicle Accident Fund’s Catherine Shipushu, nine people died at the scene of the crash, while the 10th person died in hospital. The bus driver was one of those who died instantly.
“Around 28 people sustained varying degrees of injuries, with three confirmed cases of severe injuries. Two of the severely injured patients, one of whom is the truck driver, were airlifted from Tsumeb to Windhoek and are both currently in ICU. The third patient was transported to Ongwediva for further injury management. The ages and gender of the deceased have not been released as yet,” she said.
Health authorities at the Tsumeb District Hospital told The Namibian that they had treated 43 people while five were taken to Tsumeb Private Hospital.
Nine of those who where getting treatment at Tsumeb District Hospital were transferred to Oshakati State Hospital where they are currently getting treatment, the hospital said. All the bodies of those who died in the accident were taken to the Oshakati Police mortuary where relatives started arriving yesterday to identify them.
Oshana Police Commisioner Ndahangwapo Kashihakumwa called on those who might have lost relatives in the crash to go to the Oshakati Police mortuary to identify them. The Namibian arrived at the scene a few hours after the accident.
“When we got here, I couldn’t believe my eyes. Everyone was screaming and crying,” said Fritz Kantewa, an ambulance driver from Oshivelo.
Maria Sheya, a survivor and employee of the Kalahari Sands Hotel in Windhoek, said she was on her way to visit her mother in hospital.
She was also sleeping when the accident happened. So too was another survivor, Fransina Gotlieb (24), whose face was cut by broken glass.
Christofina Andreas (29) was not aware of the accident until people woke her up and told her that they had been in an accident. She also suffered cuts to her face.
Elizabeth Nakale (40) said her baby was ripped from her arms by the impact. Police later found the baby crying in the bush and returned it to her.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.namibian.com.na/news/full-story/archive/2012/october/article/horror-crash-kills-10/
10 drown in Lagos boat mishap as LASEMA recovers 5 bodies
No fewer than 10 persons were Sunday drowned, when a passenger boat capsized in Ojo River, in Oto-Awori Local Council Development Area of Lagos State.
It would be recalled that last February, similar incident occurred in the council with five passengers, mainly school pupils, drowning.
Vanguard learnt that the boat capsized at about 11:00 a.m., due to the high tide experienced at the early hours of the day, following the rainfall which occurred late on Saturday.
Confirming the report, the General Manager of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, LASEMA, Dr. Femi Oke-Osanyintolu, said that five bodies have since been recovered from the river.
Oke-Osanyintolu explained “the boat was en route Imude from Ido-Oluwo, a riverine community in Oto-Awori LCDA.
According to him; “Immediately the agency was contacted, it deployed its search and rescue team to the scene of the incident. And since then, five bodies have been recovered from the river.”
Although he did not disclose the names of those whose bodies were recovered, he said that the five were aged between 10 and 16 years respectively.
When vanguard contacted the Baale of Ido-Oluwo, he declined comments, saying he was yet to be briefed properly on the cause of the incident.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/10/10-drown-in-lagos-boat-mishap-as-lasema-recovers-5-bodies/
It would be recalled that last February, similar incident occurred in the council with five passengers, mainly school pupils, drowning.
Vanguard learnt that the boat capsized at about 11:00 a.m., due to the high tide experienced at the early hours of the day, following the rainfall which occurred late on Saturday.
Confirming the report, the General Manager of the Lagos State Emergency Management Agency, LASEMA, Dr. Femi Oke-Osanyintolu, said that five bodies have since been recovered from the river.
Oke-Osanyintolu explained “the boat was en route Imude from Ido-Oluwo, a riverine community in Oto-Awori LCDA.
According to him; “Immediately the agency was contacted, it deployed its search and rescue team to the scene of the incident. And since then, five bodies have been recovered from the river.”
Although he did not disclose the names of those whose bodies were recovered, he said that the five were aged between 10 and 16 years respectively.
When vanguard contacted the Baale of Ido-Oluwo, he declined comments, saying he was yet to be briefed properly on the cause of the incident.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/10/10-drown-in-lagos-boat-mishap-as-lasema-recovers-5-bodies/
Jnaneswari victims' kin to move court
KOLKATA: Miffed over delay in issuing death certificates, members of 16 families, who lost their kin in the Jnaneswari Express accident on May 28, 2010, are planning to move the court. According to them, they can't even claim their jobs and succession documents in the absence of the death certificates.
Of the 150 victims of the tragedy, about 40 bodies were heavily mutilated and later many were identified through DNA matching. Still 23 bodies are still of the train accident are lying in the morgues for identification. As several DNA profiles did not match, the state, in June, 2012, the state government's home (political) department issued a missive to the relatives of 11 victims of the Jnaneswari express advising them to take legal route. The state had said that under the provision of law it's not permissible to issue death certificates unless the bodies are identified.
Juthika Atta, whose husband Prasenjit was in the S-3 compartment, is shattered. "His body could not be traced. DNA test didn't help. I got Rs 10 lakh as compensation. But I need a job to take care of my daughter Poulami (7) and the ailing in-laws. So, I need the death certificate.",the railways won't give me a job."
The compensation package included Rs 5 lakh from the railways, Rs 2 lakh from the PM's Relief Fund and Rs 3 lakh from the CM's Relief Fund.
For Rajesh Kumar Bathra, life came to a halt, as his wife Indu Devi, daughter Sneha (17) and son Saurav (13) were in the train on the fateful day. While Sneha could not be found, an injured Saurav died in a hospital on May 31,2010. He received his wife's body on December 26, 2010. "I visit Midnapore and Kharagpur regularly to find out Sneha."
Surendra Singh, who lost his wife Nilam (37) and sons Rahul (17) and Rohit (15), goes to Midnapore every month to find traces of missing Nilam and Rahul. Rohit was found dead on the spot. "My younger son Raju gave samples thrice for the DNA test. But Nilam and Rahul are still untraced. Raju had applied for a job in the railways, but they turned it down stating that he was only eligible in his father's absence."would have if the father had died then he would have been eligible."
Unnati Mondal lost her husband Swapan Mondal and with one-year old niece Latikais yet to get their death certificates.
Hisabuddin Sheikh is lobbying with the railway officials for a job for his nephew Selim Sheikh (19), as his brother Ayajuddin died in the accident. on his way to the middle-east.
But the death certificate is an impediment.
65-year old Suresh Gajbhiy's son Amit (31) and daughter-in-law Sunita died in the accident. "It is difficult for me to come from Nagpur for the death certificate." Similarly, Pankaj Upadhyay of Madhya Pradesh finds it difficult to come frequently to Kolkata for his brother Pradip's death certificate.
For 73-year-old Sushil Kumar Sil and his 65-year-old wife Mallika, life is of little value as they lost their son Tapas (42), daughter-in-law Chaitali (31), daughter Sujata Das (35), son-in-law Shyamal Das (38) and grandsons Srijit (10), Srinjay (3) and Siddhartha (7). They shifted to Sodepur from their Dunlop residence as it was impossible for them to stay in the same house.
Former chief justice of Calcutta high court Chittatosh Mookerjee said a petition before the court can help the kin get death certificates. He said that under the Evidence Act, a person, who had not been heard of for seven years, is presumed to be dead. "But the court, through inference, can direct for providing a death certificate, if it is proved that they had died due to the accident."
It is unending wait for 16 family members, who lost their dear ones in the Jnaneswari Express on May 28, 2010. They are yet to get death certificates of their relatives and so they are now moving high court for relief. Without it many are unable to claim jobs or get succession certificate.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://m.timesofindia.com/city/kolkata/Jnaneswari-victims-kin-to-move-court/articleshow/16998964.cms
Of the 150 victims of the tragedy, about 40 bodies were heavily mutilated and later many were identified through DNA matching. Still 23 bodies are still of the train accident are lying in the morgues for identification. As several DNA profiles did not match, the state, in June, 2012, the state government's home (political) department issued a missive to the relatives of 11 victims of the Jnaneswari express advising them to take legal route. The state had said that under the provision of law it's not permissible to issue death certificates unless the bodies are identified.
Juthika Atta, whose husband Prasenjit was in the S-3 compartment, is shattered. "His body could not be traced. DNA test didn't help. I got Rs 10 lakh as compensation. But I need a job to take care of my daughter Poulami (7) and the ailing in-laws. So, I need the death certificate.",the railways won't give me a job."
The compensation package included Rs 5 lakh from the railways, Rs 2 lakh from the PM's Relief Fund and Rs 3 lakh from the CM's Relief Fund.
For Rajesh Kumar Bathra, life came to a halt, as his wife Indu Devi, daughter Sneha (17) and son Saurav (13) were in the train on the fateful day. While Sneha could not be found, an injured Saurav died in a hospital on May 31,2010. He received his wife's body on December 26, 2010. "I visit Midnapore and Kharagpur regularly to find out Sneha."
Surendra Singh, who lost his wife Nilam (37) and sons Rahul (17) and Rohit (15), goes to Midnapore every month to find traces of missing Nilam and Rahul. Rohit was found dead on the spot. "My younger son Raju gave samples thrice for the DNA test. But Nilam and Rahul are still untraced. Raju had applied for a job in the railways, but they turned it down stating that he was only eligible in his father's absence."would have if the father had died then he would have been eligible."
Unnati Mondal lost her husband Swapan Mondal and with one-year old niece Latikais yet to get their death certificates.
Hisabuddin Sheikh is lobbying with the railway officials for a job for his nephew Selim Sheikh (19), as his brother Ayajuddin died in the accident. on his way to the middle-east.
But the death certificate is an impediment.
65-year old Suresh Gajbhiy's son Amit (31) and daughter-in-law Sunita died in the accident. "It is difficult for me to come from Nagpur for the death certificate." Similarly, Pankaj Upadhyay of Madhya Pradesh finds it difficult to come frequently to Kolkata for his brother Pradip's death certificate.
For 73-year-old Sushil Kumar Sil and his 65-year-old wife Mallika, life is of little value as they lost their son Tapas (42), daughter-in-law Chaitali (31), daughter Sujata Das (35), son-in-law Shyamal Das (38) and grandsons Srijit (10), Srinjay (3) and Siddhartha (7). They shifted to Sodepur from their Dunlop residence as it was impossible for them to stay in the same house.
Former chief justice of Calcutta high court Chittatosh Mookerjee said a petition before the court can help the kin get death certificates. He said that under the Evidence Act, a person, who had not been heard of for seven years, is presumed to be dead. "But the court, through inference, can direct for providing a death certificate, if it is proved that they had died due to the accident."
It is unending wait for 16 family members, who lost their dear ones in the Jnaneswari Express on May 28, 2010. They are yet to get death certificates of their relatives and so they are now moving high court for relief. Without it many are unable to claim jobs or get succession certificate.
Monday 29 October 2012
http://m.timesofindia.com/city/kolkata/Jnaneswari-victims-kin-to-move-court/articleshow/16998964.cms
Sunday, 28 October 2012
Flood Sacks Mortuary: Attendants pile corpses on roof tops
The flood that caused havoc across the country has sacked the General Hospital, Patani in Patani Local Government Area of Delta State, forcing officials to stack corpses evacuated from the morgue on an emergency platform that had been inventively constructed between the ceiling and roof of the endangered health institution.
Delta State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Joseph Otumara, confirmed, yesterday, that several other government hospitals were affected by the flood, including the one in Patani, but said he had not received any report concerning the movement of corpses.
However, coordinator of the Rural Health Africa Initiative, RAHI, a non-governmental organization, which is on ground, catering for the victims of the flood in Patani and surrounding communities, Dr. Chris Ekiyor, told Sunday Vanguard, “We saw corpses from the morgue of the Patani hospital affected by the flood floating on the waters, some were standing leg deep in the flood, and others in different awkward position”.
He added, “This was at the initial stage of the flood, but I must commend the mortuary attendant and other officials of the hospital; they understood the effect of the corpses that were washed away by the flood from the morgue, what I saw is not a mortuary, but they were embalming corpses there. They salvaged the corpses from the flood and loaded them up on an over-the –roof platform”.
Ekiyor, who spoke at the RAHI Relief Camp for Flood Victims, situated at New Town, Patani, along the East-West Road, continued: “My concern, among other things, is that there are many shallow graves in this area, and, besides drowned animals like dogs and goats, other dead bodies might have been dug up by the rampaging flood.
“Some of the villagers have not only been fishing in this contaminated body of water, but also cooking with it. It was not until we started educating them on the dangers of what they were doing that they stopped, because they took the floodwater as part of their normal river and were washing with it, fishing inside, bathing and cooking with it”.
The RAHI coordinator pointed out that if not that the mortuary attendant in Patani hospital acted quickly, the floating corpses from the morgue would have been decomposing by now and formed part of the mass of the floodwater that the people were cooking and bathing with.
“This is not a story, RAHI witnessed it, we have been here for more 22 days, there is no other group attending to the health of the victims of the disaster in this area, but us. We also know the kind of cases that the patients are presenting; there are more than 3,000 flood victims in our camp. We feed them and attend to their health problems.
Commissioner Otumara, who opined that there might not be an epidemic because of the measures the state government had put in place, said, “Many government hospitals in Patani, Bomadi, Ogriagbane and other communities were affected by the flood, but are we concerned, first and foremost, by the safety of the people. So, we moved them to government relief camps, there are about 20 of them, where doctors, nurses and other health officials attend to them”.
Specifically on the General Hospital, Patani, he said, “The Ministry of Health is not aware of the development you are talking about. I am not even sure the hospital there has a mortuary”.
Told by Sunday Vanguard that there was a functional morgue in the hospital and the corpses were embalmed and kept there, he said, “Well, no official report was made to the ministry”.
A source hinted our reporter, “The Patani hospital is an old structure and the way flood dealt with the hospital, the health institution is likely to cave in if any attempt is made to use it without major reconstruction. And that will mean that Patani may not have General Hospital for sometime”.
The health commissioner admitted that because of the cut-off of the East-West Road by flood and submerging of the Patani hospital, the state government did not open a relief camp in Patani, but it was collaborating with RAHI in the treatment of victims, as the Ministry of Health had sent drugs to the relief camp run by the NGO.
He said the government ensured that there was proper sanitation and handling of health problems at the 20 relief camps and with the measure of success achieved, he remained optimistic that there might not be an epidemic.
Besides, Otumara said it was initially rowdy in the camps because of the sheer population, but the ministry had been able to combat a lot of diseases by immunizing the children and administering polio vaccination.
The commissioner also said that public health educators from the Ministry of Health had been drafted to affected communities to carry out enlightenment and educate the people on the correct practices to adopt in a situation like the one at hand.
“For instance, people were defecating inside the floodwater but they have stopped it following the enlightenment campaign of the ministry”, he added.
“There is a standing instruction in the camps that if anybody coughs and notices blood, he should report to the health officials, but if the person opts to hide it, anybody who observed it should alert the health personnel so that they will handle it.
“We are also conducing general screening and making plans to handle cases of tuberculosis and cholera in the event that there is an outbreak. We have already ordered for cholera vaccines and like I said, basic hygiene is being observed in the 20 camps because we know that is what will solve the problem”
Otumara said that all treatment carried out in the relief camps were free of charge and, since the governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, had set up a Post-Flood Committee, he was sure government would do more and committee would recommend other ways of assisting the Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs.
Sunday 28 October 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/10/flood-washes-away-corpses-in-govt-hospital/
Delta State Commissioner for Health, Dr. Joseph Otumara, confirmed, yesterday, that several other government hospitals were affected by the flood, including the one in Patani, but said he had not received any report concerning the movement of corpses.
However, coordinator of the Rural Health Africa Initiative, RAHI, a non-governmental organization, which is on ground, catering for the victims of the flood in Patani and surrounding communities, Dr. Chris Ekiyor, told Sunday Vanguard, “We saw corpses from the morgue of the Patani hospital affected by the flood floating on the waters, some were standing leg deep in the flood, and others in different awkward position”.
He added, “This was at the initial stage of the flood, but I must commend the mortuary attendant and other officials of the hospital; they understood the effect of the corpses that were washed away by the flood from the morgue, what I saw is not a mortuary, but they were embalming corpses there. They salvaged the corpses from the flood and loaded them up on an over-the –roof platform”.
Ekiyor, who spoke at the RAHI Relief Camp for Flood Victims, situated at New Town, Patani, along the East-West Road, continued: “My concern, among other things, is that there are many shallow graves in this area, and, besides drowned animals like dogs and goats, other dead bodies might have been dug up by the rampaging flood.
“Some of the villagers have not only been fishing in this contaminated body of water, but also cooking with it. It was not until we started educating them on the dangers of what they were doing that they stopped, because they took the floodwater as part of their normal river and were washing with it, fishing inside, bathing and cooking with it”.
The RAHI coordinator pointed out that if not that the mortuary attendant in Patani hospital acted quickly, the floating corpses from the morgue would have been decomposing by now and formed part of the mass of the floodwater that the people were cooking and bathing with.
“This is not a story, RAHI witnessed it, we have been here for more 22 days, there is no other group attending to the health of the victims of the disaster in this area, but us. We also know the kind of cases that the patients are presenting; there are more than 3,000 flood victims in our camp. We feed them and attend to their health problems.
Commissioner Otumara, who opined that there might not be an epidemic because of the measures the state government had put in place, said, “Many government hospitals in Patani, Bomadi, Ogriagbane and other communities were affected by the flood, but are we concerned, first and foremost, by the safety of the people. So, we moved them to government relief camps, there are about 20 of them, where doctors, nurses and other health officials attend to them”.
Specifically on the General Hospital, Patani, he said, “The Ministry of Health is not aware of the development you are talking about. I am not even sure the hospital there has a mortuary”.
Told by Sunday Vanguard that there was a functional morgue in the hospital and the corpses were embalmed and kept there, he said, “Well, no official report was made to the ministry”.
A source hinted our reporter, “The Patani hospital is an old structure and the way flood dealt with the hospital, the health institution is likely to cave in if any attempt is made to use it without major reconstruction. And that will mean that Patani may not have General Hospital for sometime”.
The health commissioner admitted that because of the cut-off of the East-West Road by flood and submerging of the Patani hospital, the state government did not open a relief camp in Patani, but it was collaborating with RAHI in the treatment of victims, as the Ministry of Health had sent drugs to the relief camp run by the NGO.
He said the government ensured that there was proper sanitation and handling of health problems at the 20 relief camps and with the measure of success achieved, he remained optimistic that there might not be an epidemic.
Besides, Otumara said it was initially rowdy in the camps because of the sheer population, but the ministry had been able to combat a lot of diseases by immunizing the children and administering polio vaccination.
The commissioner also said that public health educators from the Ministry of Health had been drafted to affected communities to carry out enlightenment and educate the people on the correct practices to adopt in a situation like the one at hand.
“For instance, people were defecating inside the floodwater but they have stopped it following the enlightenment campaign of the ministry”, he added.
“There is a standing instruction in the camps that if anybody coughs and notices blood, he should report to the health officials, but if the person opts to hide it, anybody who observed it should alert the health personnel so that they will handle it.
“We are also conducing general screening and making plans to handle cases of tuberculosis and cholera in the event that there is an outbreak. We have already ordered for cholera vaccines and like I said, basic hygiene is being observed in the 20 camps because we know that is what will solve the problem”
Otumara said that all treatment carried out in the relief camps were free of charge and, since the governor, Dr. Emmanuel Uduaghan, had set up a Post-Flood Committee, he was sure government would do more and committee would recommend other ways of assisting the Internally Displaced Persons, IDPs.
Sunday 28 October 2012
http://www.vanguardngr.com/2012/10/flood-washes-away-corpses-in-govt-hospital/
Hurricane Sandy’s death toll rises to 65 as flooding continues in Haiti
PORT-AU-PRINCE, Haiti — As Americans braced Sunday for Hurricane Sandy, Haiti was still suffering.
Officials raised the storm-related death toll across the Caribbean to 65, with 51 of those coming in Haiti, which was pelted by three days of constant rains that ended only on Friday.
As the rains stopped and rivers began to recede, authorities were getting a fuller idea of how much damage Sandy brought on Haiti. Bridges collapsed. Banana crops were ruined. Homes were underwater. Officials said the death toll might still rise.
“This is a disaster of major proportions,” Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe told The Associated Press, adding with a touch of hyperbole, “The whole south is under water.”
The country’s ramshackle housing and denuded hillsides are especially vulnerable to flooding. The bulk of the deaths were in the southern part of the country and the area around Port-au-Prince, the capital, which holds most of the 370,000 Haitians who are still living in flimsy shelters as a result of the devastating 2010 earthquake.
Santos Alexis, mayor of the southern city of Leogane, said Sunday that the rivers were receding and that people were beginning to dry their belongings in the sun.
“Things are back to being a little quiet,” Alexis said by telephone. “We have seen the end.”
Sandy also killed 11 in Cuba, where officials said it destroyed or damaged tens of thousands of houses. Deaths were also reported in Jamaica, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico. Authorities in the Dominican Republic said the storm destroyed several bridges and isolated at least 130 communities while damaging an estimated 3,500 homes.
Jamaica’s emergency management office on Sunday was airlifting supplies to marooned communities in remote areas of four badly impacted parishes.
In the Bahamas, Wolf Seyfert, operations director at local airline Western Air, said the domestic terminal of Grand Bahamas’ airport received “substantial damage” from Sandy’s battering storm surge and would need to be rebuilt.
28 October 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/hurricane-sandys-death-toll-rises-to-65-as-flooding-continues-in-haiti/2012/10/28/4cb94900-2101-11e2-92f8-7f9c4daf276a_story.html
Officials raised the storm-related death toll across the Caribbean to 65, with 51 of those coming in Haiti, which was pelted by three days of constant rains that ended only on Friday.
As the rains stopped and rivers began to recede, authorities were getting a fuller idea of how much damage Sandy brought on Haiti. Bridges collapsed. Banana crops were ruined. Homes were underwater. Officials said the death toll might still rise.
“This is a disaster of major proportions,” Prime Minister Laurent Lamothe told The Associated Press, adding with a touch of hyperbole, “The whole south is under water.”
The country’s ramshackle housing and denuded hillsides are especially vulnerable to flooding. The bulk of the deaths were in the southern part of the country and the area around Port-au-Prince, the capital, which holds most of the 370,000 Haitians who are still living in flimsy shelters as a result of the devastating 2010 earthquake.
Santos Alexis, mayor of the southern city of Leogane, said Sunday that the rivers were receding and that people were beginning to dry their belongings in the sun.
“Things are back to being a little quiet,” Alexis said by telephone. “We have seen the end.”
Sandy also killed 11 in Cuba, where officials said it destroyed or damaged tens of thousands of houses. Deaths were also reported in Jamaica, the Bahamas and Puerto Rico. Authorities in the Dominican Republic said the storm destroyed several bridges and isolated at least 130 communities while damaging an estimated 3,500 homes.
Jamaica’s emergency management office on Sunday was airlifting supplies to marooned communities in remote areas of four badly impacted parishes.
In the Bahamas, Wolf Seyfert, operations director at local airline Western Air, said the domestic terminal of Grand Bahamas’ airport received “substantial damage” from Sandy’s battering storm surge and would need to be rebuilt.
28 October 2012
http://www.washingtonpost.com/world/the_americas/hurricane-sandys-death-toll-rises-to-65-as-flooding-continues-in-haiti/2012/10/28/4cb94900-2101-11e2-92f8-7f9c4daf276a_story.html
Saturday, 27 October 2012
Edhi buries 200,000th unidentified body as govt apathy to issue persists
KARACHI, Oct 26: The number of unidentified bodies buried by the Edhi Foundation crossed the 200,000th mark earlier this month, as the police and other relevant authorities have failed to devise a system to identify unclaimed corpses despite advanced technological facilities.
The Edhi Foundation said it started the job in the mid-1980s after its founder Abdul Sattar Edhi felt the need for a place where unclaimed bodies could be buried with all religious rituals.
The country’s largest charity since then has buried more than 200,000 bodies at its Mowachh Goth graveyard and the number of deaths in different incidents and accidents has kept growing.
“We started the job in 1984-85,” said Anwar Kazmi, the administrator of the Edhi Foundation. “The then Karachi mayor Abdul Sattar Aghani provided us with a 10-acre piece in the Mowachh Goth area. The need further grew and the authorities gave us two more pieces of land, 10 acres each.”
Since no other system exists, he said, the Edhi Foundation buried every unclaimed body after keeping it for three days at the morgue in Sohrab Goth. A photograph was also taken of the dead to be shown to people visiting the facility in search of their relatives, he said.
“After waiting for three days for claimants, we bury the body in the Mowachh Goth graveyard. Earlier this month we buried the 200,000th body and the number has kept growing. If anyone recognises his or her loved one through the photograph after burial, it’s up to them to shift the body anywhere else.
However, most people do not go for that process and we for their satisfaction remove the number allotted to the grave and put the deceased’s name there,” added Mr Kazmi.
He deplored that despite several attempts by the charity, no system had been developed to identify the bodies. He said the charity reached an agreement with the National Database Registration Authority (Nadra) a couple of years back to trace the family links of the unclaimed bodies after obtaining their fingerprints, but the idea did not materialise.
While the police have been implementing a range of projects costing billions of rupees, ranging from an e-policing programme to an upgrade of the forensic investigations system, they have so far ignored the issue of unidentified bodies, which requires no more complicated a system than a mechanism whereby the fingerprints of the body are taken soon after finding it and matched with a Nadra record.
The authorities recognise that it only takes a few seconds to determine the family links of an individual registered with Nadra, but take no interest in the project.
“In this high-tech era, it’s a simple task and we have all due resources to execute that job,” said Muneer Sheikh, AIG for the forensic division.
“The Sindh police’s forensic division has all the resources through which it can trace family links of any unidentified deceased person. We have identified some eight unclaimed bodies at different times.”
He said under the rules the respective police station should inform the forensic division that was bound to take fingerprint of every unidentified body. The Sindh police authorities had notified the regulations, but they were not being followed, he added.
“If the fingerprints are acquired of each body, we have ample resources to trace the deceased’s family links. It just takes a phone call to the forensic division by the investigation office of the respective police station, but unfortunately there is a sheer lack of seriousness on part of the officers,” added AIG Sheikh.
Saturday 27 October 2012
http://dawn.com/2012/10/27/edhi-buries-200000th-unidentified-body-as-govt-apathy-to-issue-persists/
The Edhi Foundation said it started the job in the mid-1980s after its founder Abdul Sattar Edhi felt the need for a place where unclaimed bodies could be buried with all religious rituals.
The country’s largest charity since then has buried more than 200,000 bodies at its Mowachh Goth graveyard and the number of deaths in different incidents and accidents has kept growing.
“We started the job in 1984-85,” said Anwar Kazmi, the administrator of the Edhi Foundation. “The then Karachi mayor Abdul Sattar Aghani provided us with a 10-acre piece in the Mowachh Goth area. The need further grew and the authorities gave us two more pieces of land, 10 acres each.”
Since no other system exists, he said, the Edhi Foundation buried every unclaimed body after keeping it for three days at the morgue in Sohrab Goth. A photograph was also taken of the dead to be shown to people visiting the facility in search of their relatives, he said.
“After waiting for three days for claimants, we bury the body in the Mowachh Goth graveyard. Earlier this month we buried the 200,000th body and the number has kept growing. If anyone recognises his or her loved one through the photograph after burial, it’s up to them to shift the body anywhere else.
However, most people do not go for that process and we for their satisfaction remove the number allotted to the grave and put the deceased’s name there,” added Mr Kazmi.
He deplored that despite several attempts by the charity, no system had been developed to identify the bodies. He said the charity reached an agreement with the National Database Registration Authority (Nadra) a couple of years back to trace the family links of the unclaimed bodies after obtaining their fingerprints, but the idea did not materialise.
While the police have been implementing a range of projects costing billions of rupees, ranging from an e-policing programme to an upgrade of the forensic investigations system, they have so far ignored the issue of unidentified bodies, which requires no more complicated a system than a mechanism whereby the fingerprints of the body are taken soon after finding it and matched with a Nadra record.
The authorities recognise that it only takes a few seconds to determine the family links of an individual registered with Nadra, but take no interest in the project.
“In this high-tech era, it’s a simple task and we have all due resources to execute that job,” said Muneer Sheikh, AIG for the forensic division.
“The Sindh police’s forensic division has all the resources through which it can trace family links of any unidentified deceased person. We have identified some eight unclaimed bodies at different times.”
He said under the rules the respective police station should inform the forensic division that was bound to take fingerprint of every unidentified body. The Sindh police authorities had notified the regulations, but they were not being followed, he added.
“If the fingerprints are acquired of each body, we have ample resources to trace the deceased’s family links. It just takes a phone call to the forensic division by the investigation office of the respective police station, but unfortunately there is a sheer lack of seriousness on part of the officers,” added AIG Sheikh.
Saturday 27 October 2012
http://dawn.com/2012/10/27/edhi-buries-200000th-unidentified-body-as-govt-apathy-to-issue-persists/
Nermin Sarajlic: Hunt for Missing Gets Harder Each Year
Nermin Sarajlic, a forensic pathologist and head of the Forensic Department of the Medical Faculty in Sarajevo - who has worked for the International Commission for Missing Persons, ICMP, in Bosnia for years - says the search missing persons is becoming harder as time elapses.
According to the ICMP figures, around 30,000 people were missing, presumably dead, at the end of the 1992-5 war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. To date, two thirds of those have been found and identified. Around 10,000 people are still missing.
“A few years after the war we discovered a mass grave with the remains of a wife, mother and two sons,” Sarajlic recalls.
“They were killed near their home but the man managed to escape. He came back the following day and buried them near the house.”
“We came with him and looked for this grave all day. We barely managed to find it. I use this example to show how difficult it can be to find a grave, even when you have all the facts to hand, so imagine what it’s like today, when there are fewer witnesses and the terrain has changed,” Sarajlic told BIRN.
As a forensic pathologist, Sarajlic is the first on the scene when a mass grave is found. He says many problems slow down the identification of remains, ranging from the type of grave to issues of staffing.
If the mass grave is of a secondary or tertiary type, which means that the bodies have been moved from one grave to another, the remains will be mixed up, Sarajlic says. This makes the exhumation difficult, but it is also makes the forensic work and the task of identifying the victims hard as well.
“I am aware that this process seems long and too long to some, but it’s quite common to assemble a single body after conducting as many as eight DNA tests on body parts found in different graves - up to four graves in some cases, where bodies have been moved,” he explains.
Sarajlic says that there are cases when it is impossible to isolate the DNA, for instance when the remains have been burnt.
Another issue slowing the search for missing persons, Sarajlic says, is a combination of poor data about the locations of mass graves and lack of expert forensic pathologists.
“The conditions we work in are poor. The media only cover exhumations, and what comes later, in terms of the identifying and piecing the bodies back together, just isn’t covered. There are only 12 or 13 forensic pathologists in the whole of Bosnia and only seven or eight are working on these issues,” he says.
“It’s not only overall numbers, it’s that we all have other work to do. There is not a single forensic pathologist who is solely dedicated to the work of exhuming and identifying missing persons,” Sarajlic notes.
He blames the Bosnian authorities for not recognizing the need to form centres for forensic pathology.
“I feel that the state has not shown interest. From the very start, the existing forensic departments within medical faculties should have been upgraded. There was an opportunity when the Institute for Missing Persons was formed, to create a forensic division within it, but it wasn’t done. That is why we have such a small number of experts today,” he believes.
Although his job entails engaging with horrific scenes of graves and remains, Sarajlic derives deep satisfaction from the belief that he is helping victims and their families.
“All I can say is that I am trying to do my best,” he says.
“The way I see it, if I do my job well – identifying victims, piecing together bodies – then I am helping people and victims in the only way that they can still be helped. I am trying to focus on getting the job done, but it is never easy,” Sarajlic concludes.
Wednesday 27 October 2012
http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/nermin-sarajlic-hunt-for-missing-gets-harder-each-year/btj-topic-missing-persons-latest-headlines/3
According to the ICMP figures, around 30,000 people were missing, presumably dead, at the end of the 1992-5 war in Bosnia and Herzegovina. To date, two thirds of those have been found and identified. Around 10,000 people are still missing.
“A few years after the war we discovered a mass grave with the remains of a wife, mother and two sons,” Sarajlic recalls.
“They were killed near their home but the man managed to escape. He came back the following day and buried them near the house.”
“We came with him and looked for this grave all day. We barely managed to find it. I use this example to show how difficult it can be to find a grave, even when you have all the facts to hand, so imagine what it’s like today, when there are fewer witnesses and the terrain has changed,” Sarajlic told BIRN.
As a forensic pathologist, Sarajlic is the first on the scene when a mass grave is found. He says many problems slow down the identification of remains, ranging from the type of grave to issues of staffing.
If the mass grave is of a secondary or tertiary type, which means that the bodies have been moved from one grave to another, the remains will be mixed up, Sarajlic says. This makes the exhumation difficult, but it is also makes the forensic work and the task of identifying the victims hard as well.
“I am aware that this process seems long and too long to some, but it’s quite common to assemble a single body after conducting as many as eight DNA tests on body parts found in different graves - up to four graves in some cases, where bodies have been moved,” he explains.
Sarajlic says that there are cases when it is impossible to isolate the DNA, for instance when the remains have been burnt.
Another issue slowing the search for missing persons, Sarajlic says, is a combination of poor data about the locations of mass graves and lack of expert forensic pathologists.
“The conditions we work in are poor. The media only cover exhumations, and what comes later, in terms of the identifying and piecing the bodies back together, just isn’t covered. There are only 12 or 13 forensic pathologists in the whole of Bosnia and only seven or eight are working on these issues,” he says.
“It’s not only overall numbers, it’s that we all have other work to do. There is not a single forensic pathologist who is solely dedicated to the work of exhuming and identifying missing persons,” Sarajlic notes.
He blames the Bosnian authorities for not recognizing the need to form centres for forensic pathology.
“I feel that the state has not shown interest. From the very start, the existing forensic departments within medical faculties should have been upgraded. There was an opportunity when the Institute for Missing Persons was formed, to create a forensic division within it, but it wasn’t done. That is why we have such a small number of experts today,” he believes.
Although his job entails engaging with horrific scenes of graves and remains, Sarajlic derives deep satisfaction from the belief that he is helping victims and their families.
“All I can say is that I am trying to do my best,” he says.
“The way I see it, if I do my job well – identifying victims, piecing together bodies – then I am helping people and victims in the only way that they can still be helped. I am trying to focus on getting the job done, but it is never easy,” Sarajlic concludes.
Wednesday 27 October 2012
http://www.balkaninsight.com/en/article/nermin-sarajlic-hunt-for-missing-gets-harder-each-year/btj-topic-missing-persons-latest-headlines/3