Monday, 10 December 2012

Mass grave found in Tripoli


One-hundred and three bodies have been discovered in a mass grave in the Gergarish district of Tripoli.

The find was made on Tuesday at the Sidi Hamid cemetery as part of a broader search for missing persons killed by the former regime that is ongoing across Libya. The entity responsible for the excavation is the Tripoli Missing Persons Committee, which falls under the SSC.

It is reported that some of the bodies have been identified as being from Zawia, and it is believed they were killed during the 2011 revolution. DNA samples from the bodies will be sent for testing to try and establish the identities of each of the dead individuals.

In the past 12 months, mass graves have been discovered in numerous Libyan towns and cities, including Tripoli, Benghazi, Zliten, Ajdabiya and Sirte.

Monday 10 December 2012

http://www.libyaherald.com/2012/12/06/mass-grave-found-in-tripoli/

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At least 13 dead after floods in Congo


At least 13 people have died in the Republic of Congo and two dozen others were injured after torrential rains caused homes to collapse in southern Brazzaville.

A Red Cross official said 13 bodies had been recovered over the weekend, while Laurel Kihounzou, mayor of the southern Brazzaville district of Makelekele, told reporters that at least 26 people were injured.

According to witnesses, dozens of houses collapsed after a river in the Makelekele neighbourhood burst its banks.

Police confirmed the death toll, adding that they had provided shelter to nearly 600 residents affected by the flooding.

Monday 10 December 2012

http://www.theaustralian.com.au/news/breaking-news/at-least-13-dead-after-floods-in-congo/story-fn3dxix6-1226534116686

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Baldia fire tragedy: Fresh samples for DNA test sent to Islamabad


Police investigators have sent fresh samples, collected again from the 33 unidentified bodies at the Edhi morgue, to a forensic laboratory in Islamabad for DNA matching with the families whose loved ones have been missing since the Sept 11 Baldia Town factory inferno.

The exercise for the identification of the 33 bodies, which are beyond recognition, was started afresh following a recent Sindh High Court directive in the Baldia factory fire case, while the families of many victims desperate to know their fate for the past three months have been told to wait for another two weeks.

The process, officials said, could take 15 to 20 days.

“We had collected the samples on Nov 30,” said Dr Jalil Qadir, the police surgeon who heads a medical team tasked with the job.

He said: “Thirty one complete bodies are beyond recognition, while two others can’t be said complete bodies but fragments of bodies. The samples of all 33 objects were collected and handed over to the police investigators for further process.”

He said the Sindh health department had conducted a similar exercise some three months ago. However, there were some ‘complications’ that could not lead to complete results of the sampling.

His observations matched comments of Sub-Inspector Jehanzaib of the SITE-B police station, the investigation officer of the Ali Enterprises inferno that killed more than 250 people in September.

“In the previous exercise, we had sent samples of 76 unidentified bodies,” the police officer said.

“We kept sending reminders and requested them to expedite the process. Once or twice they mentioned some lacking or something missing but mostly the delay was on the part of the laboratory,” he added.

He said the fresh identification process was initiated under the Sindh High Court directives to make the process more transparent and flawless.

This time, he said, extra care had been taken in collection of bodies’ samples as well as blood samples of the claimant of the bodies for matching.

“But it would take 15 to 20 days to complete the process. I agree it is hard to satisfy the family members of the missing workers and to give them an exact timeframe for the completion of the process after so much delay,” he added.

While hearing two petitions related to the Baldia Town factory fire, the Sindh High Court earlier last week was informed that only 16 bodies could be identified through the earlier DNA testing.

The bench ordered the case investigation officer to take fresh samples from the family members to test the 33 unidentified bodies.

The authorities had declared a total of 259 deaths in the fire that engulfed the Baldia factory on the eve of Sept 11 and took more than 18 hours to extinguish with over 50 firefighters taking part in the operation using almost all available machinery and equipment of the fire department.

As the process of bodies’ identification remained inconclusive, the agony of the victims’ families has yet to end. It also gave birth to challenges for other institutions involved in the process.

The Edhi Foundation, which has been looking after the unidentified bodies for almost three months at it morgue, has finally asked the authorities to settle the issue or allow it to bury the remains.

“It’s quite difficult for us to manage the task,” said Anwar Kazmi, the administrator of the Edhi Foundation.

“Last week, we informed the police authorities and sought permission from other relevant authorities for the burial in our Mowach Goth graveyard within the next 10 days. However, the plan was put on hold on a police request and also under the Sindh High Court directives.”

Monday 10 December 2012

http://dawn.com/2012/12/10/baldia-fire-tragedy-fresh-samples-for-dna-test-sent-to-islamabad/

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Officials hope to find more Pablo survivors


A week after typhoon Pablo wrought havoc in wide areas of Mindanao, national and local disaster officials are not giving up hope to find more survivors in still-isolated mining villages around the gold-rich Mt. Diwata (Mt. Diwalwal) in Monkayo, Compostela Valley and as well as those in Davao Oriental.

As this developed, separate search and rescue operations are being conducted in the waters of the Sulu Sea and adjoining areas for the 315 fishermen from General Santos City who were reportedly caught in the eye of storm after embarking on a tuna fishing expedition last Nov. 20. Since then, they have made no contacts with their waiting families back home.

“We are not giving up hope that there are survivors still out there waiting to be rescued, especially in the high-land villages that are still isolated,” National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) Administrator and Office of Civil Defense Executive Officer Benito Ramos said.

Ramos added that the 315 tuna fishermen are still classified as missing persons.

As such, he said, a separate massive search and rescue operation is being undertaken to locate the missing fishermen, whom the NDRRMC has included in its long of lists of missing persons due to the onslaught of typhoon Pablo in the country.

“They (fishermen) could just have sought shelter in several islands and other safer areas at the height of the storm,” Ramos said.

Over in Compostela Valley, Ramos said an organized search and rescue as well as retrieval operations are being carried out in the hope of finding survivors as well as to retrieve of those who have perished in the flashflood and landslides.

Saying that search and rescue teams have yet to cover all the areas devastated by Pablo especially highland and upstream villages around Mt. Diwata, Ramos said they are still expecting to rescue survivors out there.

Continuous retrieval operations are also being conducted by combined Army and police troops along with civilian rescue groups in New Bataan, the worst-hit town in Compostela Valley, he said.

The same efforts are also being done in the badly-devastated villages in the towns of Baganga, Cateel and Boston in Davao Oriental, Ramos added.

“For as long as we believe that there are still survivors out there and there are bodies to be recovered, our search and rescue as well retrieval operations will continue. I am still hopeful that we will find survivors,” Ramos said.

As of Monday, the death toll left by Pablo as reported by the NDRRMC has risen to 647 while 780 others still missing and with 1,482 persons injured.

A total of 29,390 families or 133,892 individuals totally displaced by Pablo with no homes to return to are still staying in 172 evacuation centers.

Monday 10 December 2012

http://www.philstar.com/nation/2012/12/10/884462/officials-hope-find-more-pablo-survivors

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Latin singer and reality TV star Jenni Rivera, 43, dies in plane crash while flying over Mexico as search teams find her driver's license among wreckage


The plane carrying Latin singer Jenni Rivera was revealed to have malfunctioned in 2005 as it is now believed that the Rivera and six others died when the plane crashed on Sunday.

Seven years ago, a fuel system malfunction caused one of the plane's wings to weigh more than another while it was attempting to take off from an Amarillo airstrip. No one was injured in the 2005 incident.

The cause of Sunday's crash remains unknown, but investigators now believe that all of the passengers and crew died on board, with Rivera's presence confirmed by the discovery of her half-melted driver's license.

The wreckage was spread 300 feet from the point of impact outside Monterrey, Mexico. Rivera and the six other people aboard the plane - two pilots and four members of her entourage - are presumed dead, though authorities have found no bodies amid the debris.

'There is nothing recognizable, neither material nor human in the wreckage,' transportation ad communication minister Gerardo Ruiz Esparza told the Televisa network.

The 43-year-old mother of five is already being mourned by her family in Lakewood, California, and her millions of fans.

River was revered for her soulful voice and her openness about her personal struggles.'I want to thank you all for your support, and please remember her with all your heart,' Rivera's father Pedro said outside his Lakewood, California, home. The U.S.-registered Learjet 25 went missing early Sunday after taking off from the city of Monterrey.

Jorge Domene, spokesman for Nuevo Leon's government, said the plane left Monterrey about 3.30am after a concert there and aviation authorities lost contact with the craft about 10 minutes later.

It had been scheduled to arrive in Toluca, outside Mexico City, about an hour later. Jose Antonio Gonzalez, the mayor of the town of Iturbide in Nuevo Leon state, said earlier the plane had been located in the municipality of Los Tejocotes.

Domene says a search for the plane was launched early Sunday, with helicopters from the local civilian protection agency flying over the state.

Seven people including the star's publicist, Arturo Rivera, lawyer, makeup artist, Jacob Yebale, and the flight crew were believed to be aboard, the ministry of transportation and communication said in a statement.

Monday 10 December 2012

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2245506/Jenni-Rivera-dies-plane-crash-Mexico-search-teams-drivers-license-wreckage.html

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647 confirmed dead, 780 still missing from typhoon Pablo


The death toll from typhoon “Pablo” (international name” Bopha) that struck several provinces in the Visayas and Mindanao last week has climbed to 647 as rescue workers continued to search for 780 individuals who remained missing as of Monday, the National Disaster Risk Reduction and Management Council (NDRRMC) said.

Benito Ramos, NDRRMC executive director, said the government has been preparing for a possible mass burial of at least 217 unidentified victims whose remains were still unclaimed by their relatives.

Out of the total number of fatalities, he said 400 were already identified and retrieved by their families.

In Compostela Valley and Davao Oriental alone, the military reported that 641 residents died due to falling trees, flashfloods, landslides and other incidents triggered by the powerful typhoon.

“If nobody will claim the bodies in the next 48 hours, we may bury them in mass graves. But all the bodies will be placed in caskets and will be tagged,” Ramos told reporters.

He said the government had prepared at least 500 caskets for the unclaimed cadavers “so there is semblance of decent burial.”

“For those looking for their relatives, we urge them to coordinate with the municipal health officer to check if their loved ones had already been buried,” Ramos said. In its latest report, the NDRRMC said 1,482 people were injured while 109 were rescued in typhoon-hit provinces in Mindanao and Visayan regions.

It said a total of 487,364 families composed of 5,412,140 individuals in 38 cities and 30 provinces in nine regions were affected by the killer typhoon, which spawned floods, landslides and storm surges.

According to the NDRRMC, a total of 133,892 persons are still staying in evacuation centers. It said the typhoon damaged 70,869 houses.

Monday 10 December 2012

http://newsinfo.inquirer.net/321893/647-confirmed-dead-780-still-missing-from-typhoon-pablo

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